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Unique Strain of Rickettsia parkeri Associated with the Hard Tick Dermacentor parumapertus Neumann in the Western United States.

Authors :
Paddock, Christopher D
Stabb, Eric V1
Paddock, Christopher D
Allerdice, Michelle EJ
Karpathy, Sandor E
Nicholson, William L
Levin, Michael L
Smith, Travis C
Becker, Tom
Delph, Robert J
Knight, Robert N
Ritter, Jana M
Sanders, Jeanine H
Goddard, Jerome
Paddock, Christopher D
Stabb, Eric V1
Paddock, Christopher D
Allerdice, Michelle EJ
Karpathy, Sandor E
Nicholson, William L
Levin, Michael L
Smith, Travis C
Becker, Tom
Delph, Robert J
Knight, Robert N
Ritter, Jana M
Sanders, Jeanine H
Goddard, Jerome
Source :
Applied and environmental microbiology; vol 83, iss 9, e03463-e03416; 0099-2240
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

In 1953, investigators at the Rocky Mountain Laboratories in Hamilton, MT, described the isolation of a spotted fever group Rickettsia (SFGR) species from Dermacentor parumapertus ticks collected from black-tailed jackrabbits (Lepus californicus) in northern Nevada. Several decades later, investigators characterized this SFGR (designated the parumapertus agent) by using mouse serotyping methods and determined that it represented a distinct rickettsial serotype closely related to Rickettsia parkeri; nonetheless, the parumapertus agent was not further characterized or studied. To our knowledge, no isolates of the parumapertus agent remain in any rickettsial culture collection, which precludes contemporary phylogenetic placement of this enigmatic SFGR. To rediscover the parumapertus agent, adult-stage D. parumapertus ticks were collected from black-tailed jackrabbits shot or encountered as roadkills in Arizona, Utah, or Texas from 2011 to 2016. A total of 339 ticks were collected and evaluated for infection with Rickettsia species. Of 112 D. parumapertus ticks collected in south Texas, 16 (14.3%) contained partial ompA sequences with the closest identity (99.6%) to Rickettsia sp. strain Atlantic rainforest Aa46, an SFGR that is closely related or identical to an SFGR species that causes a mild rickettsiosis in several states of Brazil. A pure isolate, designated strain Black Gap, was cultivated in Vero E6 cells, and sequence analysis of the rrs, gltA, sca0, sca5, and sca4 genes also revealed the closest genetic identity to Rickettsia sp. Atlantic rainforest Aa46. Phylogenetic analysis of the five concatenated rickettsial genes place Rickettsia sp. strain Black Gap and Rickettsia sp. Atlantic rainforest Aa46 with R. parkeri in a distinct and well-supported clade.IMPORTANCE We suggest that Rickettsia sp. Black Gap and Rickettsia sp. Atlantic rainforest Aa46 represent nearly identical strains of R. parkeri and that Rickettsia sp. Black Gap or a very similar strain of R. p

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Applied and environmental microbiology; vol 83, iss 9, e03463-e03416; 0099-2240
Notes :
application/pdf, Applied and environmental microbiology vol 83, iss 9, e03463-e03416 0099-2240
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391613267
Document Type :
Electronic Resource