Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Molecular, Cellular, and Environmental Rickettsiology, Department of Veterinary Biosciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Columbus, Ohio, USA
2. Department of Clinical Studies, Ontario Veterinary College, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Neorickettsia
(formerly
Ehrlichia
)
risticii
is an obligatory intracellular bacterium of digenetic trematodes. When a horse accidentally ingests aquatic insects containing encysted trematodes infected with
N. risticii
, the bacterium is transmitted from trematodes to horse cells and causes an acute and often fatal disease called Potomac horse fever (PHF). Since the discovery of
N. risticii
in the United States in 1984, using immunofluorescence and PCR assays, PHF has been increasingly recognized throughout North America and South America. However, so far, there exist only a few stable
N. risticii
culture isolates, all of which are from horses within the United States, and the strain diversity and environmental spreading and distribution of pathogenic
N. risticii
strains remain poorly understood. This paper reports the isolation of
N. risticii
from the blood of a horse with acute PHF in Ontario, Canada. Intracellular
N. risticii
colonies were detected in P388D
1
cells after 47 days of culturing and 8 days after the addition of rapamycin. Molecular phylogenetic analysis based on amino acid sequences of major surface proteins P51 and Ssa1 showed that this isolate is distinct from any previously sequenced strains but closely related to midwestern U.S. strains. This is the first Canadian strain cultured, and a new method was developed to reactivate dormant
N. risticii
to improve culture isolation.
IMPORTANCE
Neorickettsia risticii
is an environmental bacterium that lives inside flukes that are parasitic to aquatic snails, insects, and bats. When a horse accidentally ingests insects harboring flukes infected with
N. risticii
, the bacterium is transmitted to the horse and causes an acute and often fatal disease called Potomac horse fever. Although the disease has been increasingly recognized throughout North and South America,
N. risticii
has not been cultured outside the United States. This paper reports the first Canadian strain cultured and a new method to effectively culture isolate
N. risticii
from the horse blood sample. Molecular analysis showed that the genotype of this Canadian strain is distinct from previously sequenced strains but closely related to midwestern U.S. strains. Culture isolation of
N. risticii
strains would confirm the geographic presence of pathogenic
N. risticii
, help elucidate
N. risticii
strain diversity and environmental spreading and distribution, and improve diagnosis and development of vaccines for this dreadful disease.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
5 articles.
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