Tick-borne haemoparasite occurrence and Anaplasma species diversity in selected South African wild rodents and domestic dogs
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University of Pretoria
Abstract
Since its first discovery, Anaplasma phagocytophilum has gained interest in both veterinary
(and human) medicine as the causative agent of tick-borne fever in ruminants and granulocytic
anaplasmosis in humans and in a wide variety of domestic animals. The enzootic cycle includes
rodents, wild ungulates and possibly birds as reservoir hosts. Reports of human granulocytic
anaplasmosis occurring in Africa have been few. In South Africa there have been no official
diagnoses of A. phagocytophilum in humans. The first report of the molecular detection of a
bacterium closely related to A. phagocytophilum in South Africa was in whole blood specimens
from dogs in 2005, which was designated Anaplasma sp. South African dog strain. More
recently, the same Anaplasma sp. South African dog strain as well as A. phagocytophilum and
an Orientia tsutsugamushi-like partial 16S rRNA sequence were detected in several dog
samples collected in the Mnisi community, Bushbuckridge, Mpumalanga, South Africa. Little
is known about the significance of this finding. The aim of this study was, therefore, to
determine the occurrence of A. phagocytophilum in selected small rodent species collected
from four South African provinces and in dogs from the Mnisi community, and to molecularly
characterize the Anaplasma species found.
Molecular analysis was carried out on 37 wild rodent blood samples (Rhabdomys pumilio,
Rhabdomys dilectus, Micaelamys namaquensis and Myotomys unisulcatus) collected from four
provinces within South Africa and 56 domestic dog blood samples collected from the Mnisi
community, Bushbuckridge, Mpumalanga, South Africa. All samples were screened for the
presence of Anaplasma, Ehrlichia, Theileria and Babesia species using the Reverse Line Blot
(RLB) hybridization assay. The same samples were also subjected to real-time quantitative
PCR (qPCR) analysis for the specific detection of A. phagocytophilum. The RLB results have
shown single infections of A. bovis (3.3%), Babesia microti (3.3%) and Ehrlichia ruminantium (3.3%) in R. pumilio (four-striped grass mouse) while Anaplasma sp. Omatjenne (33.1%) and
E. ruminantium (33.1%) were detected in M. namaquensis (Namaqua rock mouse). There were
83.3% (n = 25) mixed infections in R. pumilio; of which B. microti was the highest (56.7%).
There were no mixed infections in the other three rodent species. For both R. dilectus (mesic
four-striped grass rat) and M. unisalcatus (Karoo bush rat), PCR products only hybridized with
the genus-specific probes, and with none of the species-specific probes; indicating the presence
of novel species or a variant of a species. In dogs, single infections of B. microti (3.6%), B.
rossi (3.6%) and E. canis (21.4%) were detected. Mixed infections were present in 50% of the
dog samples. The RLB assay only detected 4.3% A. phagocytophilum positive samples in both
rodents and dogs whereas qPCR detected 57% A. phagocytophilum DNA positive samples in
both rodents and dogs; most propably due to the A. phagocytophilum real-time PCR probe
cross-reacting with Anaplasma sp. Zambian and South African dog strain DNA. The
pathogen’s 16S rRNA gene was subsequently amplified, cloned and sequenced from eight
samples (7 dogs; 1 rodent) that tested positive by the qPCR assay. A total of 36 recombinant
sequences were obtained from the eight samples. BLASTn homology searches showed that the
obtained sequences had 98-100% sequence identity to published sequences of A.
phagocytophilum, A. platys, Anaplasma sp. from Zambian and South African dogs; and A.
bovis. The observed sequence similarities were confirmed by Neighbor-joining and Maximum
Likelihood phylogenetic analyses.
The study highlighted the importance of wild rodents and dogs as reservoir species for
haemoparasites that are of medical and veterinary importance. We have shown that: (i) wild
rodents and domestic dogs in South Africa habour many tick-borne pathogens, some of which
are animal and human pathogens, further studies should be carried out to determine the risk of
these infections to human health; (ii) the qPCR assay was more sensitive than the RLB assay
in detecting A. phagocytophilum infections, however, the specificity of the assay should be
confirmed; (iii) sequence analyses confirmed the presence of A. phagocytophilum DNA in a
dog; and (iv) Anaplasma sp. Zambian and South African dog strain seems to be a common
species in South African dogs, more studies are needed to determine the taxonomic status and
epidemiology of these species in South Africa.
Description
Dissertation (MSc)--University of Pretoria, 2018.
Keywords
UCTD
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Wills-Berriman, SK 2018, Tick-borne haemoparasite occurrence and Anaplasma species diversity in selected South African wild rodents and domestic dogs, MSc Dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/70539>