1.Ehrlichia bacteria and ehrlichiosis.
Gao-yu ZHAO ; Xiao-ping CHEN ; Yong-zhen ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2013;34(6):642-646
3.Molecular Detection and Identification of
Hong Qing ZHAO ; Pei Pei LIU ; Feng XUE ; Miao LU ; Xin Cheng QIN ; Kun LI
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2021;34(12):1020-1023
5.Detection and sequential analysis of Granulocytic ehrlichia 444-Epank gene.
Qiumin ZHAO ; Wuchun CAO ; Jianmin LI ; Panhe ZHANG ; Shanhu CHEN ; Kexin CAO ; Dongqi GAO ; Hong YANG ; Xitan ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2002;23(4):286-288
OBJECTIVETo provide further pathogenic evidence of Granulocytic ehrlichia infection in China.
METHODSSpecific primers derived from 444-Epank gene were used to amplify Granulocytic ehrlichia DNA from specimens of ticks, animals and human blood. PCR products of ticks were cloned and sequenced.
RESULTS444 bp specific DNA fragments were amplified from 2 of 62 pools of Ixodes persulcatus collected from Heilongjiang province and 1 of 129 blood specimens from forest workers in Inner Mongolia. Eight animal specimens were negative. PCR products from ticks were then cloned and sequenced. It differed at 23 positions in comparison to American strain (AF047897) with 94.9% homology. The homology of deduced ammonia was 88.44%.
CONCLUSIONOur findings further confirmed that Granulocytic ehrlichia infection did exist in China.
DNA, Bacterial ; analysis ; Ehrlichia ; classification ; genetics ; isolation & purification ; Ehrlichiosis ; microbiology ; Genes, Bacterial ; Humans ; Phylogeny ; Polymerase Chain Reaction ; Sequence Analysis, DNA
6.Serological Analysis of Ehrlichiosis in Korean from 1990 to 1992.
Won Jong JANG ; Kwang Don JUNG ; Jong Hyun KIM ; Seung Hyun LEE ; Ik Sang KIM ; Myung Sik CHOI ; Kyung Hee PARK
Journal of Bacteriology and Virology 2002;32(3):255-261
Ehrlichia sennetsu is the causative agent of human Sennetsu ehrlichiosis. Ehrlichiosis is an acute and occasionally chronic infectious disease caused by obligate intracellular bacteria in the family Rickettsiaceae. To understand the seroepidemiological patterns of ehrlichiosis in Korea, a total of 2,625 patients with acute febrile episode reported from 1990 to 1992 were surveyed using an indirect fluorescent antibody assay (IFA). The result was as follows. Seropositivity for ehrlichiosis was 3.23% by excluding highly cross-reacted sera with other rickettsial antigens. Sera reacted to E. sennetsu showed the cross reaction with other rickettsia as in the order of R. typhi 49.6%, R. conorii 31.6%, R. japonica 28.1%, C. burnetii 26.4%, R. sibirica 25.8%, O. tsutsugamushi 25.8%, R. akari 25.4%, and R. prowazekii 25.4%. Sexual difference in the seropositivity was not noted. The age groups of fifties and under the tenth showed higher prevalence than others. Seropositivity was most prevalent in July and August. As for regional distribution, Chonbuk (10.5%) showed the highest seropositive rate. Geographical distribution of the seropositivity covered most area except Cheju province in Korea.
Bacteria
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Communicable Diseases
;
Cross Reactions
;
Ehrlichiosis*
;
Humans
;
Jeju-do
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Jeollabuk-do
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Korea
;
Neorickettsia sennetsu
;
Prevalence
;
Rickettsia
;
Rickettsiaceae
7.Microbial pathogens in ticks, rodents and a shrew in northern Gyeonggi-do near the DMZ, Korea.
Joon Seok CHAE ; Do Hyeon YU ; Smriti SHRINGI ; Terry A KLEIN ; Heung Chul KIM ; Sung Tae CHONG ; In Yong LEE ; Janet FOLEY
Journal of Veterinary Science 2008;9(3):285-293
A total of 1,618 ticks [420 individual (adults) and pooled (larvae and nymphs) samples], 369 rodents (Apodemus arius, Rattus norvegicus, Tscherskia triton, Mus musculus, and Myodes regulus), and 34 shrews (Crocidura lasiura) that were collected in northern Gyeonggi-do near the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) of Korea during 2004-2005, were assayed by PCR for selected zoonotic pathogens. From a total of 420 individual and pooled tick DNA samples, Anaplasma (A.) phagocytophilum (16), A. platys (16), Ehrlichia (E.) chaffeensis (63), Borrelia burgdorferi (16), and Rickettsia spp. (198) were detected using species-specific PCR assays. Out of 403 spleens from rodents and shrews, A. phagocytophilum (20), A. platys (34), E. chaffeensis (127), and Bartonella spp. (24) were detected with species-specific PCR assays. These results suggest that fevers of unknown causes in humans and animals in Korea should be evaluated for infections by these vector-borne microbial pathogens.
Anaplasma phagocytophilum/genetics/isolation & purification
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Animals
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Biological Warfare
;
DNA, Bacterial/genetics/isolation & purification
;
Ehrlichiosis/transmission/veterinary
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Mice/*microbiology
;
Rats/*microbiology
;
Seasons
;
Shrews/*microbiology
;
Ticks/*microbiology
;
Zoonoses
9.Investigation on Anaplasma phagocytophilum infection in rodents from forest areas in northeastern China.
Lin ZHAN ; Jing HE ; Gao-wa SAREN ; Xiao-ming WU ; Jian-bo WANG ; Qiu-min ZHAO ; Pan-he ZHANG ; Hai-nan HUANG ; Bao-gui JIANG ; Jia-fu JIANG ; Jing-bo ZHANG ; Chen-yi CHU ; Yan GAO ; Hong YANG ; Wu-chun CAO
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2007;28(2):157-159
OBJECTIVETo investigate the prevalence of Anaplasma phagocytophilum in rodents from forest areas in northeastern China.
METHODSPCR amplification, followed by sequence analysis was carried out. The sequences of 16S rRNA and gltA gene fragment amplified from rodent specimens were compared with corresponding part of the sequences deposited in GenBank.
RESULTSA total number of 276 rodents were tested, including 102 in Jilin province, 61 in Helongjiang province and 113 in Inner Mongolia autonomous region. The positive rates were 8.82%, 1.64% and 0.00%, respectively. The infection rate in rodents infected by ticks was 11.30 times higher than that in rodents without ticks (P = 0.002). The S. A. phagocytophilum 16S rRNA sequences from rodents in Jilin and Heilongjiang were identical and differed in 3-5 bases compared with the corresponding parts of A. phagocytophilum from America, Sweden and Japan. Compared with the sequences registered in GenBank, the nucleotide sequence of gltA varied from 87%-97% and its deduced amino acid sequence changed from 84%-99%.
CONCLUSIONA. phagocytophilum infection was presented in rodents from Jilin and Heilongjiang province.
Amino Acid Sequence ; Anaplasma phagocytophilum ; genetics ; isolation & purification ; Animals ; Bacterial Proteins ; analysis ; Base Sequence ; China ; Ehrlichiosis ; veterinary ; RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ; analysis ; Rodentia ; microbiology ; Ticks ; Trees
10.Trends of Bacterial Zoonoses in Humans in Korea.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2004;47(11):1035-1047
Out of 60 national communicable diseases in Korea, 23 are zoonoses, diseases transmissible from animals to humans. Among the bacterial zoonoses, plague, brucellosis, anthrax, Q fever, tularemia, glanders, and melioidosis are categorized as a high-level threat of bioterrorism and biowarfare in the world. In this paper, the trends of notifiable bacterial zoonoses recently occurring or recurring in Korea and other potential pathogens for bioterrorism or biowarfare are reviewed. Notifiable bacterial zoonoses recently occurring in Korea are enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) infection, tetanus, tuberculosis, scrub typhus, leptospirosis, brucellosis, and anthrax. Other bacterial diseases recently emerging are tularemia, ehrlichiosis, and Q fever. However, no human case of plague, glanders, and melioidosis has been reported yet.
Animals
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Anthrax
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Bioterrorism
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Brucellosis
;
Communicable Diseases
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Communicable Diseases, Emerging
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Ehrlichiosis
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Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli
;
Glanders
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Leptospirosis
;
Melioidosis
;
Plague
;
Q Fever
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Scrub Typhus
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Tetanus
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Tuberculosis
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Tularemia
;
Zoonoses*