Two novel Ehrlichia strains detected in Amblyomma tigrinum ticks associated to dogs in peri-urban areas of Argentina

•Two novel strains of Ehrlichia associated to Amblyomma tigrinum were detected.•Ticks infected with these Ehrlichia strains are parasites of dogs in peri-urban areas.•One of the Ehrlichia strains is closely related to Ehrlichia chaffeensis.•The second Ehrlichia strain is related to three new Ehrlich...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Comparative immunology, microbiology and infectious diseases microbiology and infectious diseases, 2017-08, Vol.53, p.40-44
Hauptverfasser: Cicuttin, Gabriel L., De Salvo, M. Nazarena, Nava, Santiago
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:•Two novel strains of Ehrlichia associated to Amblyomma tigrinum were detected.•Ticks infected with these Ehrlichia strains are parasites of dogs in peri-urban areas.•One of the Ehrlichia strains is closely related to Ehrlichia chaffeensis.•The second Ehrlichia strain is related to three new Ehrlichia strains from Brazil.•The Ehrlichia strains infect ticks parasites of dogs in peri-urban areas of Argentina. The aim of this work was to describe two novel strains of Ehrlichia associated to Amblyomma tigrinum from Argentina. Molecular detection of agents belonging to the family Anaplasmataceae was performed targeting three different loci: 16S rRNA gene, dsb gene and a fragment of groESL heat shock operon. The results have shown that two different strains of Ehrlichia sp. associated to A. tigrinum are circulating in peri-urban areas of Argentina. The Ehrlichia strain detected in ticks from San Luis Province, named as Ehrlichia sp. strain San Luis, is closely related to the Ehrlichia chaffeensis. The novel Ehrlichia strain detected in Córdoba Province, named as Ehrlichia sp. strain Córdoba, is phylogenetically related to three Ehrlichia strains from Brazil, two of them isolated from wild carnivorous and the third one isolated from horse. Even though Ehrlichia sp. strain Córdoba was clustered with the three Ehrlichia strains from Brazil, the genetic similarity was too low to consider them as the same taxonomic entity. Blood samples of dogs were positive to Anaplasma platys. The association of these two novel strains with A. tigrinum has epidemiological relevance because adult stages of this tick species are common parasite of dogs in rural and peri-urban areas and they are aggressive to humans. The presence of these two novel Ehrlichia strains implies a potential epidemiological risk in Argentina because the species of the genus Ehrlichia are known to be pathogenic to both domestic mammals and humans.
ISSN:0147-9571
1878-1667
DOI:10.1016/j.cimid.2017.07.001