| Literature DB >> 28241784 |
Benson C Iweriebor1,2, Elia J Mmbaga3, Abiodun Adegborioye4,5, Aboi Igwaran4,5, Larry C Obi6, Anthony I Okoh4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anaplasma and Ehrlichia are emerging tick-borne pathogens that cause anaplasmosis and ehrlichiosis in humans and other animals worldwide. Infections caused by these pathogens are deadly if left untreated. There has been relatively no systematic survey of these pathogens among ticks in South Africa, thus necessitating this study. The presence of Anaplasma and Ehrlichia species were demonstrated by PCR in ticks collected from domestic ruminants at some selected communities in the Eastern Cape of South Africa. The ticks were identified by morphological characteristics and thereafter processed to extract bacterial DNA, which was analyzed for the presence of genetic materials of Anaplasma and Ehrlichia.Entities:
Keywords: Anaplasmosis; Ehrlichiosis; South Africa; Tick-borne
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28241784 PMCID: PMC5327538 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-017-0955-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Proportion and distribution of collected tick species and the prevalence of Ehrlichia spp.
| Animal/Location | Tick species | Developmental stage | Number | Positive for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cattle |
| Adult | 160 | n/d |
|
| Adult | 70 | 3 (E2, E12, E15) | |
|
| Adult | 50 | 2 (E1, E8) | |
|
| Nymph | 0 | n/a | |
|
| Adult | 25 | 3 (E10, E7, E13) | |
|
| Adult | 8 | n/d | |
| Sheep |
| Adult | 140 | 1 (E11) |
|
| Adult | 50 | 2 (E5, E14) | |
|
| Adult | 30 | 1 (E17) | |
|
| Nymph | 0 | n/a | |
|
| Adult | 15 | 4 (E3, E4, E16, E9) | |
|
| Adult | 12 | n/d | |
| Goats |
| Adult | 60 | n/d |
|
| Adult | 60 | n/d | |
|
| Adult | 40 | n/d | |
|
| Nymph | 0 | n/a | |
|
| Adult | 10 | n/d | |
|
| Adult | 30 | n/d | |
| Horse |
| Adult | 0 | n/a |
|
| Adult | 0 | n/a | |
|
| Adult | 0 | n/a | |
|
| Nymph | 0 | n/a | |
|
| Adult | 0 | n/a | |
|
| Adult | 0 | n/a |
Key: n/a not available, n/d not detected
Fig. 1Phylogenetic relationship of various Ehrlichia spp. based on the nucleotide sequences of the genus-specific disulfide bond formation protein (dsbA) gene of Ehrlichia spp. The underlined are the Ehrlichia spp. sequences detected in this study. All the detected sequences in this study clustered phylogenetically with reference Ehrlichia spp. dsbA gene sequences obtained from the GenBank. The tree was drawn with Geneious version 9.1.5, created by Biomatters and available from http://www.geneious.com, Kearse et al., [19]