| Literature DB >> 30541628 |
Ya-Lan Huang1, Da-Na Huang1, Wei-Hua Wu1, Fan Yang1, Xiao-Min Zhang1, Miao Wang1, Yi-Jun Tang1, Qian Zhang1, Li-Fei Peng2, Ren-Li Zhang3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Two health concerns primarily related to triatomine bugs are transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi through infective feces, and allergic reactions induced by triatomine bites. In the Southwestern United States, reduviid bugs bites commonly cause insect allergy. In South China, four cases of anaphylactic shock have been reported after this bite exposure. To further classify the species of these bugs and confirm the sensitization of the triatomine saliva, we caught triatomine bugs from the region where the bites occurred and performed phylogenetic and immunohistochemical (IHC) analysis.Entities:
Keywords: Anaphylactic shock; Chagas disease; Triatoma rubrofasciata; Trypanosoma cruzi
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30541628 PMCID: PMC6291942 DOI: 10.1186/s40249-018-0509-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Poverty ISSN: 2049-9957 Impact factor: 4.520
Fig. 1The location of Hewujing Village on Donghai Island of South China
Primers used to amplify the mitochondrial 16S rRNA, cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) gene and nuclear ribosomal 18S and 28S rRNA genes
| Gene target | Forward primer (5’→3’) | Reverse primer (5’→3’) | Expected length (bp) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 16S rRNA | CGCCTGTTTATCAAAAACAT [ | CTCCGGTTTGAACTCAGATCA [ | 552 |
| 28S rRNA | GCGAGTCGTGTTGCTTGATAGTGCAG [ | TTGGTCCGTGTTTCAAGACGGG [ | 710 |
| COI | CCTGCAGGAGGAGGAGAYCC [ | TAAGCGTCTGGGTAGTCTGARTAKCG [ | 650 |
| 18S rRNA-1a | TGGTTGATCCTGCCAGTAGTC | TCGACACTCGTTTAAGAGCACC | 822 |
| 18S rRNA-2a | TGTTGCGGTTAAAAAGCTCG | TCGGAATTAACCAGACAAATCG | 803 |
| 18S rRNA-3a | AGGTTCGAAGGCGATCAGATAC | TCCTTCCGCAGGTTCACCTA | 829 |
adesigned for this study
Fig. 2The house where we collected the two adult triatomine bugs
Fig. 3a and b Dorsal and ventral views of the female T. rubrofasciata; c and d Dorsal and ventral views of the male T. rubrofasciata. I: Orange-red margin along the outer edge of the abdomen which extended horizontally between segments; II: Orange-red margin along the side of the pronotum; III: The genital region of the female adult bug was strongly projecting posteriad; IV: The first segment surpassed the apex of its head; V: Eyes at the sides of a long and cone-shaped head; VI: Ocelli; VII: Anterior angles produced into short spines of a reddish yellow color; VIII: The stout proboscis hinged beneath the thorax, covered with short hairs which were progressively longer towards tip
Fig. 4Phylogenetic tree inferred by mitochondrial 16S rRNA genes. The Maximum Likelihood method with the Tamura-Nei mode was used
Fig. 5Immunolocalization of salivary allergens of the triatomine bug. The bugs were fixed, embedded, and sectioned as described in Materials and Methods. a The serum (1:20) of healthy people as control antibody; b The serum (1:20) of the allergic patient as primary antibody. HRP labeled secondary antibody (goat anti-human IgE antibody) localizes allergens in the luminal contents of the salivary glands (I and II) and the cytoplasm of epithelium (III and IV) (original magnification, × 400)