Experimental transmission of field Anaplasma marginale and the A. centrale vaccine strain by Hyalomma excavatum, Rhipicephalus sanguineus and Rhipicephalus ( Boophilus) annulatus ticks
The cattle rickettsia Anaplasma marginale is distributed worldwide and is transmitted by about 20 tick species, but only Rhipicephalus simus, a strictly African tick species, has been shown to transmit the vaccine strain of A. centrale. The aim of the present study was to examine transmission of fie...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Veterinary microbiology 2009-03, Vol.134 (3), p.254-260 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The cattle rickettsia
Anaplasma marginale is distributed worldwide and is transmitted by about 20 tick species, but only
Rhipicephalus simus, a strictly African tick species, has been shown to transmit the vaccine strain of
A. centrale. The aim of the present study was to examine transmission of field strains of
A. marginale and of the vaccine strain of
A. centrale by three tick species –
Hyalomma excavatum,
Rhipicephalus sanguineus and
Rhipicephalus (
Boophilus)
annulatus – to susceptible calves. Two genetically distinct Israeli field strains of
A. marginale, tailed and non-tailed (AmIsT and AmIsNT, respectively), were efficiently transmitted by
R. sanguineus, whereas
H. excavatum transmitted only the tailed isolate, and
R. (
Boophilus)
annulatus did not transmit
A. marginale. None of the three tick species transmitted
A. centrale. By means of
msp1a primers in PCR assays, amplicons of similar sizes were obtained from either
A. marginale-infected calves that were used for acquisition feeding, from
R. sanguineus fed on the infected calves, or from calves to which anaplasmosis had been successfully transmitted by these ticks. Although an
A. centrale-specific fragment was amplified from salivary glands of
R. sanguineus, no transmission to susceptible cattle occurred during 3 months of observation, and anaplasmosis was not induced in splenectomized calves that were subinoculated with blood from calves on which
R. sanguineus had fed. |
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ISSN: | 0378-1135 1873-2542 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.vetmic.2008.08.004 |