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Molecular investigation, isolation and phylogenetic analsysis of Coxiella burnetii from aborted fetus and ticks

Authors :
Yunus Gur
Gulnur Serdar
Yüksel Durmaz
Yunus Kilicoglu
Selma Kaya
Abdurrahman Anil Cagirgan
Source :
Comparative immunology, microbiology and infectious diseases. 73
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Q fever is a zoonotic infection threatening human health, causing abortions in cattle, sheep and goats. Coxiella burnetii (C. burnetii) also causes serious problems such as low birth weight, infertility. This study is the first exemplary for analysis of Q fever around Black Sea region in Turkey. In the study, a total of 270 aborted fetuses (171 cattle, 79 sheep, 20 goats) and 1069 tick samples were aimed to be searched by PCR method. C. burnetii DNA was detected in 8 (2.96 %) of 270 sheep specimens while it could not be found in cattle and goat specimens. 406 sample pools were created from 1069 tick samples (490 male, 579 female) collected from 254 farm animals (187 cattle, 54 sheep, 13 goats) and 11 of these were stated positive. Tick species determined as C. burnetii positive were Hyalomma marginatum, Hyalomma anoliticum excavatum, Hyalomma detritum and Boophilus annulatus. Agent isolation was carried out within embryonated eggs. Agents were stained with Giemsa and was showed. Sequence analysis was performed for TUR/SAM/coxiella_1 (MN917207) isolate and phylogenetic tree was created. This tree, created in compliance with IS1111 transposon gene, did not form different branches in regard to host affiliation (goat, sheep, tick, human) and geographical distribution. As a result, an important zoonotic agent, C. burnetii was diagnosed in sheep aborted fetuses and the infection was proved to have spread among sheep herds in Black Sea region. Besides, 4 separate tick species found in our region hosted the agent and were found important for infection.

Details

ISSN :
18781667
Volume :
73
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Comparative immunology, microbiology and infectious diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3f7b372f04f239b40f34eb935df18c3f