| Literature DB >> 26945844 |
Cecile Cassan1, Michel Mainack Dione2, Jacques Dereure3, Souleymane Diedhiou4, Bruno Bucheton5, Mallorie Hide6, Caroline Kako6, Oumar Gaye4, Massila Senghor7, Abdoul Aziz Niang7, Anne-Laure Bañuls6, Babacar Faye4.
Abstract
Visceral leishmaniasis is not endemic in West Africa. However, high seroprevalence of Leishmania infantum infection (one of the Leishmania species that cause visceral leishmaniasis) was detected in dogs and humans in the Mont Rolland community (close to Thiès, Senegal), despite the lack of reports concerning human clinical cases. Our aim was to genetically characterize this L. infantum population and identify its origin. We thus conducted seven field surveys in 25 villages of the Mont Rolland community between 2005 and 2009 and blood samples were collected from 205 dogs. Serological testing indicated that 92 dogs (44.9%) were positive for Leishmania infection. L. infantum was identified as the cause of infection. Analysis of 29 L. infantum isolates from these dogs by multilocus microsatellite typing and multilocus sequence typing indicated that this population had very limited genetic diversity, low level of heterozygosity and only seven different genotypes (79.3% of all isolates had the same genotype). Multilocus sequence typing showed that the Mont Rolland isolates clustered with strains from the Mediterranean basin and were separated from East African and Asian strains. Therefore, our data suggest a quite recent and unique introduction into Senegal of a L. infantum strain from the Mediterranean basin.Entities:
Keywords: Dog; Leishmania infantum; Microsatellites; Multilocus sequence typing; Phylogeny; Senegal
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26945844 DOI: 10.1016/j.micinf.2016.02.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbes Infect ISSN: 1286-4579 Impact factor: 2.700