| Literature DB >> 31193911 |
Susana Remesar1, Pablo Díaz1, Alberto Prieto1, Florencio Markina2, Jose Manuel Díaz Cao1, Gonzalo López-Lorenzo1, Gonzalo Fernández1, Ceferino M López1, Rosario Panadero1, Pablo Díez-Baños1, Patrocinio Morrondo1.
Abstract
Babesiosis and Theileriosis are important worldwide-distributed tick-borne diseases for human and animals. Their presence in a particular area depends on the presence of suitable tick-vector and host species as well as competent reservoirs such as roe deer, one of the most abundant wild cervids in Spain. Spleen samples from 174 roe deer hunted in Spain were analysed to determine the prevalence of Babesia and Theileria species. DNA of both piroplasms was firstly detected using a commercial qPCR. Then, positive samples were molecularly characterized at the 18S rRNA and ITS1 genes of Babesia spp. and Theileria spp. The possible influence of some factors such as ecological area, age and sex was also assessed. Overall, 89.7% of roe deer were positive to any of the two piroplasms. Theileria spp. was more prevalent (60.9%) than Babesia spp. (19.0%); species identification could not be achieved in 17.3% of positive samples. Babesia prevalence was significantly higher in young animals and in roe deer from Oceanic regions, in contrast to Theileria spp. Five species were identified: Theileria sp. OT3 (60.3%), Babesia capreoli (15.5%), Babesia venatorum (2.9%), Theileria sp. 3185/02 (0.6%) and Babesia bigemina (0.6%). The coinfection B. capreoli/T. sp. OT3 was the most common (4.6%) followed by B. venatorum/T. sp. OT3 (0.6%) and B. bigemina/T. sp. OT3 (0.6%). Our results reveal that Theileria spp. and Babesia spp. are prevalent piroplasms in roe deer from Spain. These cervids can act as reservoirs for several Babesia and Theileria species, including the zoonotic B. venatorum. This study represents the first description of B. venatorum and B. bigemina in roe deer from Spain.Entities:
Keywords: Babesia; PCR; Roe deer; Spain; Theileria
Year: 2019 PMID: 31193911 PMCID: PMC6545327 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2019.05.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl ISSN: 2213-2244 Impact factor: 2.674
Fig. 1Map of Spain (modified from Morrondo et al., 2017) showing the four ecological areas. Dots represent the presence of Babesia spp. and/or Theileria spp. in each region.
Primers used in the four conventional PCR assays used for detecting Babesia and Theileria DNA.
| Order | Primer | Nucleotide sequence (5′-3′) | Product size | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First PCR analysis: | RIB-19 | CGG GAT CCA ACC TGG TTG ATC CTG C | 430 bp | ( |
| RIB-20 | CCG AAT TCC TTG TTA CGA CTT CTC | |||
| BAB-rumF | ACC TCA CCA GGT CCA GAC AG | |||
| BAB-rumR | GTA CAA AGG GCA GGG ACG TA | |||
| Second PCR analysis: | BAITS1-F | CGA GTG ATC CGG TGA ATT ATT C | 600 bp | ( |
| BAITS1-R | CCT TCA TCG TTG TGT GAG CC | |||
| Third PCR analysis: | 5–22F | GTT GAT CCT GCC AGT AGT | 293-338 bp | |
| 1661R | AAC CTT GTT ACG ACT TCT C | |||
| 455–479F | GTC TTG TAA TTG GAA TGA TGG TGA C | |||
| 793-772R | ATG CCC CCA ACC GTT CCT ATT A | |||
| Fourth PCR analysis: | TheiF1 | AAC CTG GTT GAT CCT GCC AG | ≈1420 bp | |
| TheiR 1 | AAA CCT TGT TAC GAC TTC TC | |||
| TheiF2 | TGA TGT TCG TTT YTA CAT GG | |||
| TheiR 2 | CTA GGC ATT CCT CGT TCA CG |
Prevalence of piroplasm species in roe deer from Spain when considering different intrinsic and extrinsic factors.
| Hunting location | Sex | Age | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oceanic (n = 67) | Mountain (n = 28) | Continental (n = 34) | Mediterranean (n = 45) (95% CI) | Female (n = 51) | Male (n = 123) | Young (n = 40) | Adult (n = 132) | |
| 1.49% (0.08–9.14) | 0 (0.00–15.02) | 0 (0.00–12.64) | 0 (0.00–9.80) | 0 (0.00–8.73) | 0.81% (0.43–5.11) | ND | ND | |
| 5.97% (1.93–15.35) | 3.57% (0.19–20.24) | 0 (0.00–12.64) | 0 (0.00–9.80) | 5.88% (1.53–17.23) | 1.63% (0.28–6.34) | 10.00% (3.25–24.60) | 0.76% (0.04–4.77) | |
| 35.82% (24.74–48.53) | 0 (0.00–15.02) | 8.82% (2.31–24.81) | 0 (0.00–9.80) | 13.73% (6.15–26.87) | 16.26% (10.45–24.24) | 27.50% (15.14–44.14) | 12.12% (7.30–19.22) | |
| 43.28% (31.42–55.92) | 3.57% (0.19–20.24) | 8.82% (2.31–24.81) | 0 (0.00–9.80) | 19.61% (10.29–33.55) | 18.70% (12.46–26.95) | 37.50% (23.17–54.19) | 12.88% (7.90–20.09) | |
| 1.49% (0.08–9.14) | 0 (0.00–15.02) | 0 (0.00–12.64) | 0 (0.00–9.80) | 0 (0.00–8.73) | 0.81% (0.43–5.11) | 0 (0.00–10.91) | 0.76% (0.04–4.77) | |
| 25.37% (15.88–37.73) | 75.00% (54.78–88.87) | 85.29% (68.17–94.46) | 84.44% (69.94–93.01) | 47.06% (33.16–61.40) | 65.84% (56.69–74.02) | 50.00% (35.20–64.80) | 63.64% (54.77–71.70) | |
| 26.87% (17.10–39.31) | 75.00% (54.78–88.87) | 85.29% (68.17–94.46) | 84.44% (69.94–93.01) | 47.06% (33.16–61.40) | 66.67% (57.52–74.75) | 50.00% (35.20–64.80) | 64.39% (55.54–72.40) | |
| 19.40% (11.13–31.25) | 25.00% (11.43–45.22) | 5.88% (1.03–21.06) | 11.11% (4.16–24.85) | 25.49% (14.77–39.91) | 11.38% (6.59–18.68) | 12.5% (4.70–27.60) | 16.67% (10.96–24.37) | |
ND: No age information was collected from this animal.
Logistic regression model for the prevalence of Babesia spp. and Theileria spp. Factors were removed following the Akaike information criterion value until the best model was built.
| Estimate | Z-value | Pr (>|t |) | OR | CI 95% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Intercept) | −0.7019 | −2.298 | 0.022 | 0.50 | 0.27–0.89 |
| Adults | – | – | – | – | – |
| Young | 1.2787 | 2.630 | 0.009 | 3.59 | 1.40–9.56 |
| Oceanic area | – | – | – | – | – |
| Continental area | −2.0212 | −3.026 | 0.002 | 0.13 | 0.03–0.43 |
| Mountain area | −3.1320 | −2.944 | 0.003 | 0.04 | 2.34e-03 - 0.23 |
| Mediterranean area | −19.0800 | −0.012 | 0.990 | 5.17e-09 | 6.63e-211- 1.44e25 |
| (Intercept) | −1.1285 | −3.253 | 0.001 | 0.32 | 0.16–0.62 |
| Oceanic area | – | – | – | – | – |
| Mountain area | 3.3257 | 5.271 | 1.36e-07 | 27.81 | 8.87–109.82 |
| Continental area | 3.2079 | 4.558 | 5.16e-06 | 24.73 | 7.03–119.30 |
| Mediterranean area | 1.9758 | 3.300 | 0.001 | 7.21 | 2.33–24.93 |
| Oceanic:Adult | – | – | – | – | – |
| Mediterranean:Young | −2.1972 | −1.944 | 0.052 | 0.11 | 0.01–1.12 |
| Continental:Young | −1.1632 | −1.122 | 0.262 | 0.31 | 0.04–2.83 |
| Mountain:Young | 1.0986 | 0.935 | 0.350 | 3.00 | 0.40–62.51 |
| Oceanic:Young | 0.2122 | 0.357 | 0.721 | 1.24 | 0.37–3.91 |