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Título: Correlation between Rhipicephalus microplus ticks and Anaplasma marginale infection in various cattle breeds in Brazil.
Autor: MARTINS, K. R.
GARCIA, M. V.
BONATTE JUNIOR, P.
DUARTE, P. O.
HIGA, L. O. S. de
CSORDAS, B. G.
BARROS, J. C.
ANDREOTTI, R.
Afiliación: Kauê Rodriguez Martins; Marcos Valério Garcia; Paulino Bonatte?Junior; Pãmella Oliveira Duarte; Leandro Oliveira Souza de Higa; Bárbara Guimarães Csordas; JACQUELINE CAVALCANTE BARROS, CNPGC; RENATO ANDREOTTI E SILVA, CNPGC.
Año: 2020
Referencia: Experimental and Applied Acarology, jun. 2020.
Descripción: The tick Rhipicephalus microplus is responsible for the transmission of Anaplasma marginale, which causes hemolytic anemia, abortion, decreased production, and mortality in cattle in Brazil. However, A. marginale can also persist in cattle herds without any clinical signs. This study investigated the relationship between the number of ticks present on each cattle and the circulating number of A. marginale msp1β gene copies in the blood of Brangus and Nellore cattle reared in the Brazilian Cerrado through a year period. Twenty-three animals (11 Brangus and 12 Nellore) were raised for 12 months with ticks counted every 18 days, and blood collected every 36 days. Blood sera was used for total antigen iELISA, genomic DNA was extracted from whole blood by the phenol/chloroform method and then analyzed by PCR to confirm A. marginale presence with the msp5 gene. Positive samples were quantified by qPCR using msp1β gene. Brangus cattle presented 4.5 fold more ticks than Nellore group. Although Brangus cattle carried a higher overall A. marginale msp1β gene presence than Nellore cattle, no relationship of tick count and copy number could be achieved due to high variability in copy number. Moreover, both breeds showed similar weight gain and a similar serological pattern throughout the year. None of the animals showed any clinical signs of anaplasmosis during the experimental period, indicating that a low level of tick infestation may be sufficient to maintain a stable enzootic situation.
Thesagro: Cerrado
NAL Thesaurus: Anaplasmosis
Palabras clave: Tick
QPCR
IELISA
Tipo de Material: Artigo de periódico
Acceso: openAccess
Aparece en las colecciones:Artigo em periódico indexado (CNPGC)

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