1.Study on the prevalence of Bartonella species in rodent hosts from different environmental areas in Yunnan.
Dong-mei LI ; Dong-zheng YU ; Qi-yong LIU ; Zheng-da GONG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2004;25(11):934-937
OBJECTIVETo investigate Bartonella infections in small mammalian reservoir hosts from different environments and types of climate in Yunnan.
METHODSFemoral blood samples were collected from the anesthetic captured animals from five counties including three types of climate. All isolates were grown on brain and heart infusion agar plates containing 5% defibrinated rabbit blood. The agar plates were incubated at 35 degrees C in a humidified with 5% CO2 environment for at least 4 weeks. Bartonella-like isolates were confirmed by the polymerase chain reaction and visualizing the target gene fragment by gel electrophoresis.
RESULTSBartonella species were isolated from 69 of 176 small animals including 4 species of 3 genera from 4 counties and the total prevalence in rodents was 39.2%. The maximal prevalence was 42.0% of Rattus tanezumi flavipectus usually inhabiting indoors and courtyard and contacting closely to human. Moreover, Bartonella isolates were obtained from Rattus noruegicus, Eothenomys miletus and Mus pahari. Life environments of captured animals involved indoors, courtyard, brush and forest in mountain.
CONCLUSIONThe finding in this study suggested the characteristic of diversity of Bartonella infections in rodent hosts in southern China included Bartonella species parasiting in a wide range of animal hosts in different environments as well as climate types. Further investigations were needed in different areas in China to confirm more mammalian reservoir hosts with Bartonella infections.
Animals ; Bartonella ; classification ; genetics ; isolation & purification ; Bartonella Infections ; epidemiology ; veterinary ; China ; epidemiology ; Disease Reservoirs ; Mice ; Rats ; microbiology ; Rodent Diseases ; microbiology ; Rodentia ; microbiology ; Species Specificity
2.Study on Bartonella vinsonii berkhoffii isolated from blood of native dogs in China.
Dong-mei LI ; Feng-xia MENG ; Xiu-ping SONG ; Zeng-jun QIN ; Xiao-ran YANG ; Hai-xia WU ; Dong-sheng REN ; Qi-yong LIU
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2006;27(4):333-338
OBJECTIVETo isolate and identify Bartonella strains from native dogs in Shandong province in China.
METHODSEDTA-anticoagulated blood samples were collected from 71 native dogs in Yanggu county of Shandong province in March 2005. All isolates were grown on brain heart infusion agar plates containing 5% defibrinated rabbit blood. The agar plates were incubated at 37 degrees C in a humidified with 5% CO2 environment for 4 weeks or longer. All Bartonella-like isolates were examined by routine Gram and Giménez staining and then followed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and PCR-RFLP analysis for identification and differentiation of the isolates. Sequencing 16S rRNA, citrate synthase (gltA) gene and 16S-23S rRNA ITS were carried out and sequential similarities were calculated using the DNASTAR5 software package. The phylogenetic tree was inferred from each bootstrap sample, using the neighbor-joining methods as executed in the MEGA 3.1 software. The translation from DNA to protein were determined by DNASIS 2.5.
RESULTSThe two Bartonella-like organisms (strains Q52SHD and Q64SHD) were isolated from the blood of 71 dogs. Light microscopic examination of the Gram and Giménez-stained micro-organisms showed small, short and slightly curved pleomorphic gram-negative bacilli. Amplified products of the three pairs of Bartonella genus-specific primers carried the same size as the predicted of those Bartonella species. Data from PCR-RFLP analysis showed that the two strains that having the same profiles were all different from the B. henselae type strain-16S rRNA, gltA and 16S-23S rRNA ITS sequences from the two isolates were 100.0%, 99.7% and 97.2% homologous to B. vinsonii berkhoffii.
CONCLUSIONSBased on these findings, the two isolates Q52SHD and Q64SHD were demonstrated as B. vinsonii berkhoffii. To our knowledge, this was the first report on the presence of Bartonella infection in native dogs from China, which constituted a large reservoir of Bartonella species in this country.
Animals ; Bartonella ; classification ; genetics ; isolation & purification ; Bartonella Infections ; veterinary ; Disease Reservoirs ; Dogs ; microbiology ; Polymerase Chain Reaction ; RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ; genetics ; Rabbits
3.Dynamics of Rodent and Rodent-borne Disease during Construction of the Three Gorges Reservoir from 1997 to 2012.
Zhao Rui CHANG ; Liang LU ; De Qiang MAO ; Hui Ming PAN ; Lian Gui FENG ; Xiao Bing YANG ; Feng Feng LIU ; Yuan Yuan HE ; Jing ZHANG ; Wei Zhong YANG
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2016;29(3):197-204
OBJECTIVETo investigate the impact of impoundment and active public health interventions on rodent populations and rodent-borne diseases in the Three Gorges reservoir region from 1997 to 2012.
METHODSSurveillance data from 1997 to 2012 were extracted from the Public Health Surveillance System of The Three Gorges established in 1997. Temporal changes in the incidences of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) and leptospirosis, rodent density, pathogen-carrying rates, and their correlations were analyzed.
RESULTSThe average indoor and outdoor rodent densities decreased overall from 1997 to 2012. The average densities decreased by 47.72% (from 4.38% to 2.29%) and 39.68% (from 4.41% to 2.66%), respectively, after impoundment (2003-2012) compared with before impoundment (1997-2002). The average annual incidence rates of HFRS and leptospirosis were 0.29/100,000 and 0.52/100,000, respectively, and decreased by 85.74% (from 0.68/100,000 to 0.10/100,000) and 95.73% (from 1.47/100,000 to 0.065/100,000), respectively, after impoundment compared with before impoundment. Incidences of HFRS and leptospirosis appear to be positively correlated with rodent density in the reservoir area.
CONCLUSIONThis study demonstrated that rodent density and incidences of rodent-borne diseases decreased and were maintained at low levels during construction of the Three Gorges dam. Measures that reduce rodent population densities could be effective in controlling rodent-borne diseases during large-scale hydraulic engineering construction.
Animal Distribution ; Animals ; China ; epidemiology ; Disease Reservoirs ; Hantavirus Infections ; epidemiology ; veterinary ; Leptospirosis ; epidemiology ; virology ; Population Density ; Rodent Diseases ; epidemiology ; microbiology ; virology ; Rodentia ; Seasons ; Time Factors ; Water Supply ; Zoonoses
4.Prevalence of Anaplasma and Bartonella spp. in Ticks Collected from Korean Water Deer (Hydropotes inermis argyropus).
Jun Gu KANG ; Sungjin KO ; Heung Chul KIM ; Sung Tae CHONG ; Terry A KLEIN ; Jeong Byoung CHAE ; Yong Sun JO ; Kyoung Seong CHOI ; Do Hyeon YU ; Bae Keun PARK ; Jinho PARK ; Joon Seok CHAE
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2016;54(1):87-91
Deer serve as reservoirs of tick-borne pathogens that impact on medical and veterinary health worldwide. In the Republic of Korea, the population of Korean water deer (KWD, Hydropotes inermis argyropus) has greatly increased from 1982 to 2011, in part, as a result of reforestation programs established following the Korean War when much of the land was barren of trees. Eighty seven Haemaphysalis flava, 228 Haemaphysalis longicornis, 8 Ixodes nipponensis, and 40 Ixodes persulcatus (21 larvae, 114 nymphs, and 228 adults) were collected from 27 out of 70 KWD. A total of 89/363 ticks (266 pools, 24.5% minimum infection rate) and 5 (1.4%) fed ticks were positive for Anaplasma phagocytophilum using nested PCR targeting the 16S rRNA and groEL genes, respectively. The 16S rRNA gene fragment sequences of 88/89 (98.9%) of positive samples for A. phagocytophilum corresponded to previously described gene sequences from KWD spleen tissues. The 16S rRNA gene fragment sequences of 20/363 (5.5%) of the ticks were positive for A. bovis and were identical to previously reported sequences. Using the ITS specific nested PCR, 11/363 (3.0%) of the ticks were positive for Bartonella spp. This is the first report of Anaplasma and Bartonella spp. detected in ticks collected from KWD, suggesting that ticks are vectors of Anaplasma and Bartonella spp. between reservoir hosts in natural surroundings.
Anaplasma/genetics/*physiology
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Animals
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Arachnid Vectors/microbiology
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Bartonella/genetics/*physiology
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Chaperonin 60/genetics
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Deer/parasitology
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Disease Reservoirs/veterinary
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RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
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Ticks/*microbiology
5.Enzooticity of the dogs, the reservoir host of Thelazia callipaeda, in Korea.
Min SEO ; Jae Ran YU ; Hyun Young PARK ; Sun HUH ; Sang Kun KIM ; Sung Tae HONG
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2002;40(2):101-103
The reservoir hosts of Thelazia callipaeda were examined. The eyes of the 76 dogs raised at farm, 78 military dogs (shepherds), 96 cattle, and 105 pigs were investigated for the presence of eyeworm. Among them, six worms of T. callipaeda were collected from two dogs raised at farm (2.7%), and 188 worms from 26 shepherds (33.5%). No worms were recovered from the cattle or pigs. These results suggest that the dogs, especially the military dogs are serving as a reservoir host of T. callipaeda. in Korea.
Animals
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Cattle
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Disease Reservoirs/*veterinary
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Dog Diseases/epidemiology/*parasitology
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Dogs
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Eye/parasitology
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Female
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*Host-Parasite Interactions
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Korea/epidemiology
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Male
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Prevalence
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Spirurida Infections/epidemiology/parasitology/*veterinary
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Swine
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Thelazioidea/*isolation & purification
6.Prevalence of Bartonella henselae and Bartonella clarridgeiae in cats and dogs in Korea.
You seok KIM ; Kyoung won SEO ; Jong hwa LEE ; Eun wha CHOI ; Hee woo LEE ; Cheol yong HWANG ; Nam shik SHIN ; Hee jeong YOUN ; Hwa young YOUN
Journal of Veterinary Science 2009;10(1):85-87
Blood, saliva, and nail samples were collected from 54 dogs and 151 cats and analyzed for the presence of Bartonella henselae with a novel nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method. Bartonella (B.) henselae was detected in feral cat blood (41.8%), saliva (44.1%), and nail (42.7%) samples. B. henselae was also detected in pet cat blood (33.3%), saliva (43.5%), and nail (29.5%) samples and in pet dog blood (16.6%), saliva (18.5%), and nail (29.6%) samples. Nine samples were infected with B. clarridgeiae and 2 were co-infected with B. henselae and B. clarridgeiae of blood samples of dogs. This report is the first to investigate the prevalence of B. henselae and B. clarridgeiae in dogs and cats in Korea, and suggests that dogs and cats may serve as potential Bartonella reservoirs.
Animals
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Bartonella/*classification
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Bartonella Infections/blood/epidemiology/microbiology/*veterinary
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Cat Diseases/blood/epidemiology/*microbiology
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Cats
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Disease Reservoirs/veterinary
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Dog Diseases/epidemiology/*microbiology
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Dogs
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Hoof and Claw/microbiology
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Korea/epidemiology
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Prevalence
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Saliva/microbiology
7.Longitudinal investigation and experimental studies on thelaziasis and the intermediate host of Thelazia callipaeda in Guanghua county of Hubei province.
Zeng-xian WANG ; Yue HU ; Ji-long SHEN ; Ke-can WANG ; Hong-yan WANG ; Bao-ling JIANG ; Peng ZHAO ; Zhi-cheng WANG ; Wei DING ; Feng WANG ; Xiu-fang XIA
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2003;24(7):588-590
OBJECTIVETo verify houseflies Musca spp. as the intermediate host of Thelazia callipaeda and reveal epidemiological situation of thelaziasis in Hubei province.
METHODSDogs eyes infected with T. callipaeda, 400 houseflies Musca and 259 fruitflies Amiota okadai in the city of Laohekou city (previously named as Guanghua county) of Hubei province had been investigated since September 2000. The newborn larvae of T. callipaeda from Laohekou suburbs were fed to houseflies Musca and A. okadai. Larvae used for the study were isolated from female T. callipaeda in laboratory and the susceptibility to houseflies Musca and A. okadai was observed.
RESULTSTwenty-one dogs from Laohekou, the original epidemic areas of thelaziasis were examined and 7 positive dogs in 21 (33.3%) and 11 T. callipaeda (9 females and 2 males) were identified. From 1975 to 2000, no thelaziasis cases were found through retrospective surveys. These 200 houseflies Musca and 135 A. okadai were dissected for examination but showed all negative with the infection. However, newborn larvae of T. callipaeda were used to experimentally infect 112 houseflies Musca and 84 A. okadai and all infected flies were examined on the 20th day after inoculation. As a consequence, houseflies Musca failed to be infected but 9 in 84 (10.7%) A. okadai were positive. 26 infective larvae of T. callipaeda were obtained and 21 of them were inoculated into right eye of one rabbit. The female worm began to produce newborn larvae in 37 days after infection and 3 adult T. callipaeda (two females and one male) were obtained.
CONCLUSIONSFruitflies A. okadai from Hubei province were susceptible to T. callipaeda, which was similar to the result of experimental studies in Anhui province. This survey further confirmed that A. okadai was the intermediate host of T. callipaeda but not houseflies Musca. Infective resources (adult dogs, for instance) had been under controlled thus human thelaziasis had been eradicated in this rural area.
Animals ; Conjunctivitis ; parasitology ; Disease Reservoirs ; Dog Diseases ; parasitology ; Dogs ; Drosophila ; parasitology ; Eye Infections, Parasitic ; epidemiology ; transmission ; veterinary ; Female ; Host-Parasite Interactions ; Houseflies ; parasitology ; Humans ; Insect Vectors ; parasitology ; Longitudinal Studies ; Male ; Spirurida Infections ; epidemiology ; transmission ; veterinary ; Thelazioidea ; isolation & purification ; physiology
8.Emerging New Phylogenetic Groups of Rabies Virus in Chinese Ferret Badgers.
Fa Ming MIAO ; Teng CHEN ; Ye LIU ; Shou Feng ZHANG ; Fei ZHANG ; Nan LI ; Rong Liang HU
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2018;31(6):479-482
Chinese ferret badger (FB)-transmitted rabies is a serious threat to public health in southeast China. Although mostly associated with dogs, the rabies virus (RABV) presents genetic diversity and has a significantly wide host range in China. Instead of the dog- and wildlife-associated China II lineage in the past decades, the China I lineage has become the main epidemic group hosted and transmitted by dogs. In this study, four new lineages, including 43 RABVs from FBs, have been classified within the dog-dominated China I lineage since 2014. FB RABVs have been previously categorized in the China II lineage. Moreover, FB-hosted viruses seem to have become the main independent FB-associated clade in the phylogenetic tree. This claim suggests that the increasing genetic diversity of RABVs in FBs is a result of the selective pressure from coexisting dog rabies. FB transmission has become complicated and serious with the coexistence of dog rabies. Therefore, apart from targeting FB rabies, priority should be provided by the appropriate state agencies to perform mass immunization of dog against rabies.
Animals
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Brain
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virology
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China
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epidemiology
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Disease Reservoirs
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veterinary
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virology
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Dog Diseases
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epidemiology
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transmission
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virology
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Dogs
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Ferrets
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virology
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Genetic Linkage
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Genetic Variation
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Phylogeny
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Phylogeography
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Rabies
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epidemiology
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transmission
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veterinary
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virology
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Rabies virus
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genetics
9.Serosurveillance of Scrub Typhus in Small Mammals Collected from Military Training Sites near the DMZ, Northern Gyeonggi-do, Korea, and Analysis of the Relative Abundance of Chiggers from Mammals Examined.
Heung Chul KIM ; In Yong LEE ; Sung Tae CHONG ; Allen L RICHARDS ; Se Hun GU ; Jin Won SONG ; John S LEE ; Terry A KLEIN
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2010;48(3):237-243
Comprehensive quarterly serosurveillance on scrub typhus in small mammals collected from military training sites located near the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), northern Gyeonggi-do (Province), ROK was conducted to determine the potential rodent-borne and associated ectoparasite disease risks to military personnel. A total of 1,196 rodents and insectivores representing 8 species, Apodemus agrarius (87.3%, n = 1,044), Mus musculus (5.4%, n = 65), Crocidura lasiura (3.3%, n = 40), Microtus fortis (2.6%, n = 31), Micromys minutus (0.3%, n = 4), Tscherskia triton (0.3%, n = 4), Rattus norvegicus (0.3%, n = 4), and Myodes regulus (0.3%, n = 4) were assayed for the presence of antibodies to Orientia tsutsugamushi. O. tsutsugamushi antibodies were detected in 6 of 8 species and seroprevalence determined; A. agrarius (45.6%), M. musculus (23.1%), M. fortis (48.4%), M. minutus (50.0%), T. triton (50.0%), and R. norvegicus (25.0%). A total of 31,184 chigger mites collected from 508 rodents and insectivores were slide-mounted and 10 species belonging to 4 genera were identified. Leptotrombidium pallidum (53.4%) was the most frequently collected, followed by L. palpale (15.7%), Neotrombicula tamiyai (14.3%), L. orientale (10.7%), L. zetum (3.1%), Walchia fragilis (2.1%), and L. gemiticulum (0.8%), while the remaining 3 species, L. subintermedium, N. gardellai, and Euschoengastia koreaensis were rarely observed (prevalence < 10%). In contrast to previous surveys, higher chigger indices of the primary scrub typhus vectors, L. pallidum (165.4), L. orientale (45.0), and L. palpale (21.4), were observed during the spring season.
Animals
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Antibodies, Bacterial/immunology
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Arachnid Vectors/classification/*microbiology
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Disease Reservoirs/classification/microbiology/*parasitology
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Humans
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Military Facilities
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Orientia tsutsugamushi/*immunology/isolation & purification
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Republic of Korea
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Rodentia/classification/*immunology/microbiology/*parasitology
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Scrub Typhus/microbiology/*transmission/*veterinary
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Seroepidemiologic Studies
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Trombiculidae/classification/*microbiology
10.Study on the molecular epidemiology of hantaviruse carried by hosts in northern suburb of Beijing.
Shu-qing ZUO ; Xiao-ming WU ; Pei-yuan SUN ; Pan-he ZHANG ; Bing-cai WANG ; Fang TANG ; Zhe DUN ; Wei CAI ; Qi LIU ; Fan-xin ZENG ; Jia-fu JIANG ; Wei LIU ; Wu-chun CAO
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2004;25(5):421-424
OBJECTIVETo investigate hantanvirus infection of captured rodents in Haidian district and Changping district of Beijing and to type hantavirus using molecular technique.
METHODSThe captured mice were classified and the density of distribution was calculated. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) technique was used to amplify the partial M fragnments of hantaviruse. Several representative positive samples were sequenced and analysed by ClustalX (5.0) and DNAClub software.
RESULTSA total of 414 animals were captured, among which Battus norvegicus was the dominant group. In Haidian district, the median infection rates with hantavirus were 13.14% in Battus norvegicus and 0 in Mus musculus Linnaeus. In Changping district, the average infection rates were 17.46% in Battus norvegicus and 3.57% in Mus musculus Linnaeus. Nucleotide sequences analysis showed that the virus detected all belonged to SEO-type. They clustered with Z37 virus and could be branched into 2 different subclades.
CONCLUSIONThe major hosts of hantavirus in Haidian and Changping district were Battus norvegicus and the epidemic strains in the two districts of Beijing were genotyped as SEO-type. Nucleotide sequence and deduced amino acid sequence from different rodents were highly homologous, while nucleotide mutation had also been observed. Further studies are required to explore the possible virus sequence mutation.
Animals ; China ; epidemiology ; DNA, Viral ; genetics ; Disease Reservoirs ; Fluorescent Antibody Technique ; Hantavirus ; classification ; genetics ; isolation & purification ; Hantavirus Infections ; epidemiology ; veterinary ; virology ; Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal Syndrome ; epidemiology ; veterinary ; virology ; Mice ; Molecular Epidemiology ; Phylogeny ; Rats ; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ; Rodent Diseases ; epidemiology ; virology