1. Prevalence and genetic characterization of Toxoplasma gondii in free-range chickens from grocery stores and farms in Maryland, Ohio and Massachusetts, USA.
- Author
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Ying Y, Verma SK, Kwok OCH, Alibana F, Mcleod R, Su C, Dubey JP, and Pradhan AK
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Protozoan genetics, Antibodies, Protozoan immunology, Biological Assay veterinary, Cats, Chickens immunology, Farms, Genetic Markers genetics, Genotype, Heart parasitology, Humans, Maryland epidemiology, Massachusetts epidemiology, Mice, Ohio epidemiology, Oocysts, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length, Prevalence, Toxoplasma genetics, Toxoplasmosis, Animal parasitology, Agglutination Tests veterinary, Chickens parasitology, Toxoplasma classification, Toxoplasma isolation & purification, Toxoplasmosis, Animal epidemiology
- Abstract
Chickens are considered important in the epidemiology of Toxoplasma gondii. Chicken hearts (n = 1185) obtained from grocery stores were tested for T. gondii infection. Antibodies to T. gondii were assayed in fluid removed from the heart cavity using the modified agglutination test (MAT) at 1:5, 1:25, and 1:100 dilutions. MAT antibodies were detected in 222 hearts at 1:5 dilution and 8 hearts at 1:25 dilution, but none were positive at 1:100 dilution. Seropositive (n = 230, 19.4%) chicken hearts were bioassayed in mice and seronegative (n = 157) chickens were bioassayed in cats. Viable T. gondii was not isolated from any hearts by bioassays in mice. The 2 cats fed 60 and 97 hearts did not excrete T. gondii oocysts. The results indicate a low prevalence of viable T. gondii in chickens from grocery stores. Molecular typing of 23 archived T. gondii strains isolated from free-range chickens from Ohio and Massachusetts using the 10 PCR-RFLP markers including SAG1, SAG2 (5'-3'SAG2 and altSAG2), SAG3, BTUB, GRA6, c22-8, c29-2, L358, PK1, and Apico revealed that seven were ToxoDB PCR-RFLP genotype #1, 11 were genotype #2, one was genotype #3, three were genotype #170, and one was mixed genotype. These results indicate that the clonal genotypes #1 (type II), #2 (type III), and #3 (type II variant) are common in free-range chickens.
- Published
- 2017
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