BackgroundRickettsioses are among both the longest known and most recently recognized infectious diseases. Although new spotted fever group rickettsiae have been isolated in many parts of the world including China, Little is known about the epidemiology of Rickettsia pathogens in ticks from Xinjiang Autonomous Region of China.MethodsIn an attempt to assess the potential risk of rickettsial infection after exposure to ticks in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region of China, a total of 200 Dermacentor silvarum ticks collected in Xinyuan district were screened by polymerase chain reaction based on the outer membrane protein A gene.Results22 of the 200 specimens (11%) were found to be positive by PCR. Phylogenetic analysis of OmpA sequences identified two rickettsial species, Rickettsia raoultii (4.5%) and Rickettsia slovaca (6.5%).ConclusionsThis study has reported the occurrence of Rickettsia raoultii and Rickettsia slovaca in Xinjiang Autonomous Region of China and suggests that Dermacentor silvarum could be involved in the transmission of rickettsial agents in China. Further studies on the characterization and culture of rickettsial species found in Dermacentor silvarum should be performed to further clarify this. Additionally, the screening of human specimens for rickettsial disease in this region will define the incidence of infection.
The experimental transmission of a recently designated Theileria uilenbergi pathogenic for sheep and goats in Northern China is described. Haemaphysalis qinghaiensis nymphs and adults developed from larvae and nymphs engorged on sheep infected with T. uilenbergi were able to respectively transmit the latter to sheep. However, when H. longicornis ticks picked up T. uilenbergi either at larval or nymphal, only the subsequent adult could transmit the parasites to sheep, the subsequent nymph could not transmit the parasites to sheep. This experiment suggested that the T. uilenbergi could be transmitted by at least two species of Haemaphysalis sp. ticks, H. longicornis and H. qinghaiensis, and the mode of transmission is stage to stage.
In the present study, two hard tick species, Haemaphysalis longicornis and H. qinghaiensis from North-western China were characterized genetically by the second internal transcribed spacer (ITS-2) of nuclear ribosomal DNA and partial 16S rDNA. Based on a fragment within the hypervariable region of 16S rDNA with the length of approximately 453 bp, the phylogenetic trees were constructed by Neighbor-Joining and Maximum-parsimony methods. The results indicated that the phylogenetic status of H. qinghaiensis was distant from that of H. longicornis and closer to H. flava. Furthermore, the ITS-2 rDNA was amplified by PCR and sequenced from individual ticks. The length of ITS-2 is 1,606 bp for H. longicornis and 1,162 bp for H. qinghaiensis. Although sequence variation between the immature stages of H. longicornis was 0.1-0.4%, nucleotide differences between the tested species ranged 2.1-23.2%, indicating that ITS-2 rDNA sequences are genetic markers for the differentiation of the two hard ticks in China. Hence, a PCR-linked restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) approach was developed for their unequivocal differentiation based on ITS-2 rDNA, which provides the foundation for further studies on ticks in China and has implications for studying the population genetic structure of the ticks and for identification and differentiation of closely related ticks.
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