Detection of blood pathogens in camels and their associated ectoparasitic camel biting keds, Hippobosca camelina: the potential application of keds in xenodiagnosis of camel haemopathogens.

Q2 Multidisciplinary AAS Open Research Pub Date : 2019-11-05 eCollection Date: 2019-01-01 DOI:10.12688/aasopenres.13021.2
Kevin O Kidambasi, Daniel K Masiga, Jandouwe Villinger, Mark Carrington, Joel L Bargul
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Background: Major constraints to camel production include pests and diseases. In northern Kenya, little information is available about blood-borne pathogens circulating in one-humped camels ( Camelus dromedarius) or their possible transmission by the camel haematophagous ectoparasite, Hippobosca camelina, commonly known as camel ked or camel fly. This study aimed to: (i) identify the presence of potentially insect-vectored pathogens in camels and camel keds, and (ii) assess the potential utility of keds for xenodiagnosis of camel pathogens that they may not vector. Methods: In Laisamis, northern Kenya, camel blood samples (n = 249) and camel keds (n = 117) were randomly collected from camels. All samples were screened for trypanosomal and camelpox DNA by PCR, and for Anaplasma, Ehrlichia, Brucella, Coxiella, Theileria, and Babesia by PCR coupled with high-resolution melting (PCR-HRM) analysis. Results: In camels, we detected Trypanosoma vivax (41%), Trypanosoma evansi (1.2%), and " Candidatus Anaplasma camelii" (68.67%). In camel keds, we also detected T. vivax (45.3%), T. evansi (2.56%), Trypanosoma melophagium (1/117) (0.4%), and " Candidatus Anaplasma camelii" (16.24 %). Piroplasms ( Theileria spp. and Babesia spp.), Coxiella burnetii, Brucella spp., Ehrlichia spp., and camel pox were not detected in any samples. Conclusions: This study reveals the presence of epizootic pathogens in camels from northern Kenya. Furthermore, the presence of the same pathogens in camels and in keds collected from sampled camels suggests the potential use of these flies in xenodiagnosis of haemopathogens circulating in camels.

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骆驼血液病原体及其相关外寄生骆驼咬伤斑的检测:斑在骆驼血液病异种诊断中的潜在应用
背景:制约骆驼生产的主要因素包括病虫害。在肯尼亚北部,关于在单驼峰骆驼(Camelus dromedarius)中传播的血源性病原体或它们可能通过骆驼吸血外寄生虫(俗称骆驼蝇或骆驼蝇)传播的信息很少。本研究的目的是:(i)确定骆驼和骆驼后代中潜在的昆虫媒介病原体的存在,以及(ii)评估后代在对可能不是媒介的骆驼病原体进行异种诊断方面的潜在效用。方法:在肯尼亚北部Laisamis地区,随机采集骆驼血液249份,骆驼皮117份。所有样本均采用PCR筛查锥虫体和骆驼痘DNA,并采用PCR结合高分辨率熔融(PCR- hrm)分析筛查无形体、埃利希体、布鲁氏菌、科希氏菌、伊氏菌和巴贝斯虫。结果:在骆驼中检出间日锥虫(41%)、伊文氏锥虫(1.2%)和骆驼候选无形体(68.67%)。在骆驼标本中检出间日疟原虫(45.3%)、伊瓦西伊氏疟原虫(2.56%)、嗜黑锥虫(1/117)(0.4%)和骆驼候选体(16.24%)。在所有样本中未检出梨形菌(伊氏杆菌和巴贝斯虫)、伯纳氏柯谢氏菌、布鲁氏菌、埃利希氏菌和骆驼痘。结论:本研究揭示了肯尼亚北部骆驼中兽疫病原体的存在。此外,在骆驼和从骆驼样本中收集的苍蝇中存在相同的病原体,表明这些苍蝇可能用于骆驼中流行的血液病原体的异种诊断。
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来源期刊
AAS Open Research
AAS Open Research Multidisciplinary-Multidisciplinary
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
审稿时长
6 weeks
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