| Literature DB >> 26860982 |
Min Cao1,2, Li Che1, Jinhai Zhang1, Jianli Hu3, Swaminath Srinivas2,4, Ruiyao Xu1, Henbing Guo1, Yun Zhang1, Changjun Wang1, Youjun Feng2.
Abstract
In 2007, 19 cases of a scrub typhus epidemic occurred within a week at a sports school in Mingguang County, Anhui Province, where no previous incidence of this mite borne disease had been reported. Sero-surveillance in 2009 indicated that 10 of the 100 school students possessed anti-Orientia tsutsugamushi antibodies. From 2009 to 2013, 60 small animals and 2250 mites were collected in the vicinity of the school. 5 of the Apodemus agrarius samples and 1 group of Leptotrombidium linhuaikongense tested positive via PCR for O. tsutsugamushi. Two strains of O. tsutsugamushi were identified by injecting Kun Ming (KM) mice peritoneally with the organs of either Apodemus agrarius or Leptotrombidium linhuaikongense. Apart from sharing 98% homology with the O. tsutsugamushi Yongworl strain, genes encoding the membrane protein from the two O. tsutsugamushi isolates shared >99% sequence homology with each other, reflecting the consistency of the pathogen in both the vector and the host. In addition, we also characterized a chronic scrub typhus infection in a local patient. The membrane protein gene fragment from the patient's blood shared 99% homology with O. tsutsugamushi Gilliam strain, suggesting that more than one O. tsutsugamushi strain is present at this location.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26860982 PMCID: PMC4748268 DOI: 10.1038/srep20737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Host animals and vector mites of O. tsutsugamushi disease in Mingguang area.
| Rodent species | Apodemus agrarius | Microtus fortis | Neomys fodiens | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of trapped animals | 38 (62.5%) | 16 (26.6%) | 2 (3.3%) | 4 (6.7%) | 60 |
| Trapped animals carrying mites | 23 (60.5%) | 5 (33.3%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 46.7% |
Figure 1Orientia tsutsugamushi present in the liquid scraped from the abdominal wall of infected mice.
The abdominal walls of infected mice were fixed and stained with Giemsa stain and presence of O. tsutsugamushi particles (purple particles) was assessed by light microscopy.
Figure 2PCR-based assays for the presence of scrub typhus.
(A) PCR products of the organs of wild small animals and chiggers M: 1 kb marker; 1–5: PCR products from the vicera of small animals; 6: PCR products from the chiggers. (B) PCR products from the organs of inoculated mice M: 1kb marker; 1–2: PCR products from the viscera of mice inoculated by the suspension of Apodemus agrarius (1) and Leptotrombidium linhuaikongense (2); C: health mice used as control. (C) PCR products from the patient with scrub typhus M: 1 kb marker; 1: PCR products from the blood of a patient with chronic infection in; 2: Negative amplification from the blood of the patient after symptomatic treatment; C: Blood from healthy adults used as control.
Figure 3Phylogenetic tree of 16 O. tsutsugamushi strains constructed based on nucleotide sequence of 56 kDa protein.
16 O. tsutsugamushi strains including standard strains: karp, M33004; Gilliam M33267; kato, M63382; Kuroki, M63380; Kawasaki M63383 and shimokoshi, M63381; local strains from Korean: yonchon U19903; Yongworl, AF430141; local strains from China: Ptan, DQ288237; Guangzhou, AY283180; Kunming, GU446598; Neimeng, DQ514319; Shandong; DQ514320; Taiwan, GQ332758; Hefei, JX976614; Sanjie, KM095135; Sanjie2, KM115577; sanjie3, KM115578.
Figure 4The endemic map for scrub typhus in Anhui province.
The names of the cities of Mingguang and Fuyang are marked in red and blue respectively. The map of Anhui Province, China was created and processed using the software of Adobe Illustrator.