Affiliation:
1. Departments of Clinical Sciences
2. Food Animal and Health Resource Management, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27606-1428
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Canine babesiosis has recently been recognized as an emerging infectious disease of dogs in North America. We sought to develop a seminested PCR to detect and differentiate
Babesia gibsoni
(Asian genotype),
B. canis
subsp.
vogeli
,
B. canis
subsp.
canis
, and
B. canis
subsp.
rossi
DNA in canine blood samples. An outer primer pair was designed to amplify an ∼340-bp fragment of the 18S rRNA genes from
B. gibsoni
(Asian genotype),
B. canis
subsp.
vogeli
,
B. canis
subsp.
rossi
, and
B. canis
subsp.
canis
but not mammalian DNA. Forward primers were designed that would specifically amplify a smaller fragment from each organism in a seminested PCR. The practical limit of detection was 50 organisms/ml of mock-infected EDTA anticoagulated whole blood. The primer pair also amplified an ∼370-bp fragment of the
B. gibsoni
(USA/California genotype) 18S rRNA gene from the blood of an experimentally infected dog with a high percentage of parasitemia. Amplicons were not detected when DNA extracted from the blood of a dog that was naturally infected with
Theileria annae
at a low percentage of parasitemia was amplified. Due to limited sensitivity, this test is not recommended for the routine diagnosis of
B. gibsoni
(USA/California genotype) or
T. annae
. The PCR test did not amplify
Toxoplasma gondii
,
Neospora caninum
,
Leishmania infantum
,
Cryptosporidium parvum
, or canine DNA under any of the conditions tested. The seminested PCR test was able to detect and discriminate
B. gibsoni
(Asian genotype),
B. canis
subsp.
vogeli
,
B. canis
subsp.
canis
, and
B. canis
subsp.
rossi
DNA in blood samples from infected dogs.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
429 articles.
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