Epidemiological survey of tick-borne pathogens in dogs in Anhui Province, China

Tick-borne diseases have continued to increase worldwide in both developing and many developed countries due to the widespread of different tick species and tick’s adaptability to different climatic weather. In order to investigate the prevalence of the tick-borne pathogens, EDTA-anticoagulated whol...

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Veröffentlicht in:Comparative immunology, microbiology and infectious diseases microbiology and infectious diseases, 2023-10, Vol.101, p.102059-102059, Article 102059
Hauptverfasser: Ayanniyi, Olalekan Opeyemi, Lu, Zhenxiao, Zhang, Hao, Li, Chunqi, Luo, Shishang, Wang, Chuanchen, Xu, Qianming, Zhang, Qingxun, Yang, Congshan
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container_title Comparative immunology, microbiology and infectious diseases
container_volume 101
creator Ayanniyi, Olalekan Opeyemi
Lu, Zhenxiao
Zhang, Hao
Li, Chunqi
Luo, Shishang
Wang, Chuanchen
Xu, Qianming
Zhang, Qingxun
Yang, Congshan
description Tick-borne diseases have continued to increase worldwide in both developing and many developed countries due to the widespread of different tick species and tick’s adaptability to different climatic weather. In order to investigate the prevalence of the tick-borne pathogens, EDTA-anticoagulated whole blood samples were aseptically collected from 765 pet dogs in twenty veterinary clinics located in sixteen prefecture-level cities in Anhui Province, China, and the samples were examined and analyzed for tick-borne pathogens using both microscopy and PCR. Our result analysis revealed 17(2.22%) positive samples to Babesia spp and 4(0.52%) positive samples to Hepatozoon spp, of which case of co-infection was recorded in Lu’An and Chuzhou. The BLAST analysis results of the 18S rRNA gene revealed that the dogs were infected with Babesia gibsoni and Hepatozoon canis. All samples were negative for Anaplasma spp., Ehrlichia spp., and Rickettsia spp. This is the first molecular report of B. gibsoni and H. canis in dogs in Anhui, China. •This is the first molecular report on Babesia spp and Hepatozoon spp in Anhui Province, China.•Phylogenetic analysis showed that B. gibsoni and H. canis are responsible for tick-borne infection in Anhui Province, China.•This study ascertains the prevalence and provides valuable information on tick-borne pathogens in Anhui Province.
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subjects 18S rRNA
Babesia
Dog
Hepatozoon
Phylogenetic analysis
title Epidemiological survey of tick-borne pathogens in dogs in Anhui Province, China
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