| Literature DB >> 35076002 |
Cécile Doderer-Lang, Denis Filisetti, Julie Badin, Charles Delale, Victoria Clavier, Julie Brunet, Chloé Gommenginger, Ahmed Abou-Bacar, Alexander W Pfaff.
Abstract
Human babesiosis in Europe is caused by multiple zoonotic species. We describe a case in a splenectomized patient, in which a routine Babesia divergens PCR result was negative. A universal Babesia spp. PCR yielded a positive result and enabled classification of the parasite into the less-described Babesia crassa-like complex.Entities:
Keywords: Babesia; Babesia crassa; France; PCR; immunocompromised patient; phylogenetic; tickborne diseases; vector-borne diseases; zoonotic disease
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35076002 PMCID: PMC8798681 DOI: 10.3201/eid2802.211596
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Two representative microscopic fields (original magnification ×1,000) of a May–Grünwald–Giemsa stained blood smear, showing different forms of Babesia trophozoites, from a 61-year-old man from western France.
Figure 2Evolutionary analysis of 18S RNA sequences of Babesia from a 61-year-old man from western France and reference sequences. Neighbor-joining tree of 1,000 bootstrap pseudoreplicates with Kimura 2-parameter distances of internal transcribed spacer 1 gene from 18S RNA sequences of the Babesia genus (MEGA X 10.1.8, https://www.megasoftware.net). Bootstrap proportions >50% are indicated. This phylogenetic tree illustrates the relationship between the species infecting this patient (GenBank accession no. MW504968) and the 20 different species of Babesia obtained from GenBank. Species, host, origin, and accession number are indicated. Theileria spp. was used as outgroup. Scale bar represents 1% of divergence. Asterisk indicates in vitro culture.