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Zoonoses Public Health ; 70(7): 594-603, 2023 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37391871

RESUMO

Rickettsia parkeri belongs to the spotted fever group (SFG) of the Rickettsia genus. This bacterium causes mild rickettsiosis in humans and is mainly transmitted by Amblyomma ticks. Its medical importance is emerging in the Americas, including Mexico. Synanthropic rodents and domiciled dogs participate as accidental hosts in epidemiological cycles of Rickettsia of the SFG. The aim is to report the presence of R. parkeri in synanthropic rodents and domiciled dogs from a rural community of Yucatán, Mexico. Rodents were captured, and plasma samples were taken from dogs in 48 households from Ucú, Yucatán, Mexico. A spleen sample (rodents) and plasma (dogs) were used in the propagation of Rickettsia on Vero cells. These infected cells were used in the extraction of genomic DNA. Rickettsia DNA was identified using a semi-nested PCR (snPCR); some products were sent for sequencing. The recovered sequences were analysed with bioinformatics programs, and a phylogenetic tree was built to determine the Rickettsia species. One hundred animals were sampled: 36 synanthropic rodents and 64 dogs. The snPCR evidenced the presence of Rickettsia DNA in 10 rodents (10/36, 27.8%) and 18 dogs (18/64, 28.1%), which represents a global frequency of 28% (28/100) in this study. The bioinformatics analysis yielded homology to R. parkeri and was demonstrated in the phylogenetic tree. The first evidence of the presence of R. parkeri in synanthropic rodents (Mus musculus) from Mexico is presented; likewise, the participation of domestic dogs in the transmission cycle of this bacterium with potential importance in public health is confirmed.

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