| Literature DB >> 26583260 |
Robert G Schaut, Maricela Robles-Murguia, Rachel Juelsgaard, Kevin J Esch, Lyric C Bartholomay, Marcelo Ramalho-Ortigao, Christine A Petersen.
Abstract
Leishmaniasis is a zoonotic disease caused by predominantly vectorborne Leishmania spp. In the United States, canine visceral leishmaniasis is common among hounds, and L. infantum vertical transmission among hounds has been confirmed. We found that L. infantum from hounds remains infective in sandflies, underscoring the risk for human exposure by vectorborne transmission.Entities:
Keywords: Leishmania; Leishmania infantum; United States; canine; emerging; hounds; leishmaniasis; parasites; protozoa; vectorborne infections; zoonotic
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26583260 PMCID: PMC4672406 DOI: 10.3201/eid2112.141167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Leishmania infantum status of US foxhounds on which infected sandflies fed*
| Sex | Age, y | Type of test, date of testing | |||||
| PCR, 2007 | PCR, 2008 | Serology/PCR, 2009 | Serology/PCR, 2010 | Serology/PCR, 2011 | DPP, 2011 | ||
| M | 7 | Borderline | – | –/– | 32– | + | |
| F | 6 | – | + | 64/– | + | ||
*Serologic results determined by immunofluorescence antibody testing: <64 indicates negative (–). PCR results: – indicates no amplification; borderline indicates amplification on 1 of 3 tests; positive (+) indicates amplification on 2 of 3 or 3 of 3 tests. DPP indicates K39/22 Dual Path Platform Test (Chembio Diagnostic Systems, Inc. Medford, NY, USA), to detect antibodies against Leishmania spp.
Figure 1Sandflies infected with Leishmania infantum from US foxhounds, showing blocked stomodeal valve. Development of L. infantum (MCAN/US/2001/ FOXYMO1) in laboratory-reared Lutzomyia longipalpis sandflies led to stomodeal valve blockage 10–13 days after infection. A) Dissected gut of infected sandfly, showing stomodeal valve (cardia) obstructed by Leishmania parasites (dashed box). Foregut removed during dissection and parasites entangled by flagella are visible. Original magnification ×10. B) Parasites obstructing stomodeal valve and parasite-secreted plug (dashed box). Original magnification ×40. C) Parasite plug dissected from the stomodeal valve, showing metacyclic promastigote parasites attached to plug (arrow), as well as free-swimming parasites (arrowheads). Original magnification ×100 with oil.
Blood meal feeding and Leishmania infantum infection status of sandflies that fed on L. infantum–infected hamsters
| Hamster no. | No. sandflies in which blood was visible/no. examined | PCR result for |
| 1 | 1/5 | – |
| 2 | 2/5 | + |
| 3 | 1/5 | – |
| 4 | 0/5 | Not applicable |
| 5 | 3/5 | 2 + /1 – |
| 6 | 2/5 | 1 +/ 1 – |
| 7 | 2/5 | – |
Figure 2Visceralization of Leishmania infantum from US foxhounds, transmitted by sandflies into hamsters. Leishmania spp.–specific quantitative PCR was performed, and parasite load was calculated from a standard curve. Horizontal bars indicate mean values for 3 experiments run in duplicate. Statistical significance was determined by 1-way analysis of variance with Bonferroni posttest between 6 naive and 15 infected groups, by tissue type. Error bars indicate ± SEM. *p<0.05.