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1.
Int J Parasitol ; 44(12): 941-53, 2014 Oct 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25236960

RESUMO

Seventy species of ticks are known from Australia: 14 soft ticks (family Argasidae) and 56 hard ticks (family Ixodidae). Sixteen of the 70 ticks in Australia may feed on humans and domestic animals (Barker and Walker 2014). The other 54 species of ticks in Australia feed only on wild mammals, reptiles and birds. At least 12 of the species of ticks in Australian also occur in Papua New Guinea. We use an image-matching system much like the image-matching systems of field guides to birds and flowers to identify Ixodes holocyclus (paralysis tick), Ixodes cornuatus (southern paralysis tick) and Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) australis (Australian cattle tick). Our species accounts have reviews of the literature on I. holocyclus (paralysis tick) from the first paper on the biology of an Australian tick by Bancroft (1884), on paralysis of dogs by I. holocyclus, to papers published recently, and of I. cornuatus (southern paralysis tick) and Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) australis (Australian cattle tick). We comment on four controversial questions in the evolutionary biology of ticks: (i) were labyrinthodont amphibians in Australia in the Devonian the first hosts of soft, hard and nuttalliellid ticks?; (ii) are the nuttalliellid ticks the sister-group to the hard ticks or the soft ticks?; (iii) is Nuttalliella namaqua the missing link between the soft and hard ticks?; and (iv) the evidence for a lineage of large bodied parasitiform mites (ticks plus the holothyrid mites plus the opiliocarid mites).


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Ixodes/classificação , Filogenia , Rhipicephalus/classificação , Carrapatos/classificação , Animais , Animais Domésticos/parasitologia , Austrália , Humanos , Ixodes/anatomia & histologia , Ixodes/fisiologia , Ixodidae/classificação , Ixodidae/parasitologia , Papua Nova Guiné , Rhipicephalus/anatomia & histologia , Rhipicephalus/fisiologia , Especificidade da Espécie , Carrapatos/anatomia & histologia , Carrapatos/fisiologia
3.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis ; 7(1): e2042, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23390560

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: In Africa, relapsing fever borreliae are neglected arthropod-borne pathogens causing mild to deadly septicemia and miscarriage. The closely related Borrelia crocidurae, Borrelia duttonii, Borrelia recurrentis and Borrelia hispanica are rarely diagnosed at the species level, hampering refined epidemiological and clinical knowledge of the relapsing fevers. It would be hugely beneficial to have simultaneous detection and identification of Borrelia to species level directly from clinical samples. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We designed a multiplex real-time PCR protocol targeting the 16S rRNA gene detecting all four Borrelia, the glpQ gene specifically detecting B. crocidurae, the recN gene specifically detecting B. duttonii/B. recurrentis and the recC gene specifically detecting B. hispanica. Compared to combined 16S rRNA gene and flaB gene sequencing as the gold standard, multiplex real-time PCR analyses of 171 Borrelia-positive and 101 Borrelia-negative control blood specimens yielded 100% sensitivity and specificity for B. duttonii/B. recurrentis and B. hispanica and 99% sensitivity and specificity for B. crocidurae. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The multiplex real-time PCR developed in this study is a rapid technique for both molecular detection and speciation of relapsing fever borreliae from blood in Africa. It could be incorporated in point-of-care laboratory to confirm diagnosis and provide evidence of the burden of infection attributed to different species of known or potentially novel relapsing fever borreliae.


Assuntos
Borrelia/isolamento & purificação , Técnicas de Diagnóstico Molecular/métodos , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase Multiplex/métodos , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase em Tempo Real/métodos , Febre Recorrente/diagnóstico , África , Técnicas Bacteriológicas/métodos , Sangue/microbiologia , Borrelia/classificação , Borrelia/genética , Humanos , Sensibilidade e Especificidade , Fatores de Tempo
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