Affiliation:
1. Department of Veterinary Pathobiology
2. Department of Zoology and Collection of Vertebrates, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Oklahoma 74708
3. Veterinary Teaching Hospital, College of Veterinary Medicine
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Anaplasma marginale
(order
Rickettsiales
, family
Anaplasmataceae
), a tick-borne pathogen of cattle, is endemic in tropical and subtropical regions of the world. Many geographic isolates of
A. marginale
occur in the United States and have been identified by major surface protein 1a (MSP1a), which varies in sequence and molecular weight due to different numbers of tandem 28- to 29-amino-acid repeats. The present study was undertaken to examine the genetic variations among isolates of
A. marginale
obtained during 2001 from infected cattle from east-central Oklahoma, where
A. marginale
is endemic. The gene and protein sequences of MSP1a and
msp4
nucleotide sequences were used to infer the phylogenetic relationships among Oklahoma and New World isolates from Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, and the United States. All 11
A. marginale
isolates collected from Oklahoma had different MSP1a sequences but identical MSP4 sequences. The phylogenies of the
msp4
sequences of 13 isolates from Oklahoma in comparison with those of 7 Latin American isolates and 12 U.S. isolates by maximum-parsimony (MP) and maximum-likelihood (ML) analyses, with
A. centrale
and
A. ovis
sequences used as outgroups, provided strong bootstrap analysis support for a Latin American clade. Isolates of
A. marginale
from the southern United States (Florida, Mississippi, and Virginia) and the west-central United States (California, Idaho, Illinois, Oregon, Missouri, and Texas) also grouped into two clades. Both clades contained isolates from Oklahoma, suggesting extensive cattle movement. ML analysis of the
msp4
sequences of isolates from Oklahoma provided bootstrap analysis support for east-central and north-central clades in Oklahoma, and both clades included isolates from Stillwater, Okla. Analysis of the codon and amino acid changes among the
msp4
sequences of isolates with different phylogenies provided evidence that
msp4
is not under positive selection pressure. In contrast, the phylogenies of the MSP1a DNA and protein sequences of 13 isolates from Oklahoma in comparison with those of 7 Latin American and 13 isolates from the United States by MP and ML analyses demonstrated no geographic clustering and provided evidence that this gene is under positive selection pressure. The results indicate that
msp1α
is not a marker for the characterization of
A. marginale
geographic isolates and suggest that the genetic heterogeneity observed among isolates of
A. marginale
within Oklahoma could be explained by cattle movement and the maintenance of different genotypes by independent transmission events.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
72 articles.
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