Zeitschriftenaufsatz
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2017
Molecular analysis of Ixodes rugicollis, Candidatus Neoehrlichia sp (FU98) and a novel Babesia genotype from a European badger (Metes metes)
Autor:in
Hornok, Sandor; Trauttwein, Klaudia; Takacs, Nora; Hodzic, Adnan; Duscher, Georg Gerhard; Kontschan, Jeno
Journal
Abstrakt
The European badger (Metes metes) is a widespread mammal in most countries of the European continent, with increasingly recognized veterinary/medical importance owing to its preferred habitats (including pastures and urban environments), broad spectrum of food items, and role as a game hunting target. However, ticks and tick-borne pathogens associated with badgers are only partly known, and most of them have not yet been analysed with molecular biological methods The aim of this study was to perform molecular taxonomic analysis of ticks collected from a road-killed European badger, as well as to molecularly investigate its ticks and blood sample for the presence of Anaplasmataceae and piroplasms.
Ticks from the badger were morphologically identified as females of Ixodes rugicollis. Based on its cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) and 16S rRNA sequences, I. rugicollis phylogenetically clustered together with I. lividus and I. arboricola, i.e. other members of the subgenus Pholeoixodes. The blood sample of the badger contained the DNA of Candidatus Neoehrlichia sp. (FU98) recently identified in red fox in Austria and the Czech Republic. This genotype is most closely related to Ca. N. lotoris (from raccoons in North America), and has lower sequence identity with the L ricinus-transmitted zoonotic agent, Ca. N. mikurensis found in Eurasia. In the blood of the badger and in one female I. rugicollis, the DNA of a new Babesia genotype was also present, which differed from a piroplasm detected in M. metes in Spain, and clustered phylogenetically in the B. microti Glade.
Phylogenetic analysis of I. rugicollis (based on two genetic markers) confirms its status in subgenus Pholeoixodes. Ca. Neoehrlichia sp. (FU98) was identified for the first time in M. metes and in Hungary. In addition, a molecularly previously not yet characterized Babesia genotype occurs in badgers in Central Europe. (C) 2016 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.
Schlagwörter
European badger; Pholeoixodes; Cytochrome oxidase; Neoehrlichia; Babesia
Dokumententyp
Originalarbeit
ISSN/eISSN
1877-959X - 1877-9603
WoS ID
PubMed ID