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      Molecular Detection of Leishmania major and L. turanica in Phlebotomus papatasi and First Natural Infection of P. salehi to L. major in North-East of Iran

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          Abstract

          Background:

          Leishmaniasis is an important public health disease in many developing countries as well in Iran. The main objective of this study was to investigate on leishmania infection of wild caught sand flies in an endemic focus of disease in Esfarayen district, north east of Iran.

          Methods:

          Sand flies were collected by sticky papers and mounted in a drop of Puri’s medium for species identification. Polymerase chain reaction techniques of kDNA, ITS1-rDNA, followed by restriction fragment length polymorphism were used for identification of DNA of Leishmania parasites within infected sand flies.

          Results:

          Among the collected female sand flies, two species of Phlebotomus papatasi and Phlebotomus salehi were found naturally infected with Leishmania major. Furthermore, mixed infection of Leishmania turanica and L. major was observed in one specimen of P. papatasi. Sequence analysis revealed two parasite ITS1 haplotypes including three L. major with accession numbers: KJ425408, KJ425407, KM056403 and one L. turanica. (KJ425406). The haplotype of L. major was identical (100%) to several L. major sequences deposited in GenBank, including isolates from Iran, (Gen Bank accession nos.AY573187, KC505421, KJ194178) and Uzbekistan (Accession no.FN677357).

          Conclusion:

          To our knowledge, this is the first detection of L. major within wild caught P. salehi in northeast of Iran.

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          Most cited references19

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          The increase in risk factors for leishmaniasis worldwide.

          P Desjeux (2001)
          Economic development leads to changing interactions between humans and their physical and biological environment. Worldwide patterns of human settlement in urban areas have led in developing countries to a rapid growth of mega-cities where facilities for housing, drinking-water and sanitation are inadequate, thus creating opportunities for the transmission of communicable diseases such as leishmaniasis. Increasing risk factors are making leishmaniasis a growing public health concern for many countries around the world. Certain risk factors are new, while others previously known are becoming more significant. While some risk factors are related to a specific eco-epidemiological entity, others affect all forms of leishmaniasis. Risk factors are reviewed here entity by entity.
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            • Abstract: not found
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            The biology and control of phlebotomine sand flies.

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              • Abstract: found
              • Article: not found

              Phlebotomine vectors of the leishmaniases: a review.

              R Killick (1989)
              An account is given of work published during the past 10 years incriminating species of phlebotomine sandflies as vectors of Leishmania species which infect man. An assessment is made of the degrees of certainty of the vectorial roles of eighty-one species and subspecies of sandflies (thirty-seven Old World and forty-four New World) in the transmission of twenty-nine leishmanial parasites of mammals. At least one species of sandfly is considered to be a proven vector of each of ten parasites. Of the eighty-one sandfly taxa, evidence is judged to be sufficient to incriminate nineteen as proven vectors (eleven Phlebotomus species and eight Lutzomyia species or subspecies) and evidence for a further fourteen (nine Phlebotomus species and five Lutzomyia species or subspecies) is considered to be strong. The suggested criteria for incrimination of a vector are anthropophily and common infection with the same leishmanial parasite as that found in man in the same place. More weight should be given to natural infections persisting after the digestion of a bloodmeal than those in the presence of blood. Supporting evidence is a concordance in the distribution of the fly and the disease in man, proof that the fly feeds regularly on the reservoir host, a flourishing development of the parasite in infected flies and the experimental transmission of the parasite by the bite of the fly.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Arthropod Borne Dis
                J Arthropod Borne Dis
                JAD
                JAD
                Journal of Arthropod-Borne Diseases
                Tehran University of Medical Sciences
                2322-1984
                2322-2271
                June 2016
                05 January 2016
                : 10
                : 2
                : 141-147
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Biochemistry and Genetic, Qazvin University of Medical Sciences, Qazvin, Iran
                [2 ]Department of Parasitology and Mycology, Cellular and Molecular Research Center, Qazvin University of Medical Sciences, Qazvin, Iran
                [3 ]Department of Medical Entomology and Vector Control, School of Public Health, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
                [4 ]Department of Parasitology and Mycology, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
                [5 ]Cellular and Molecular Research Center, Qazvin University of Medical Sciences, Qazvin, Iran
                Author notes
                [* ] Corresponding author: Professor Yavar Rassi, Email: rassiy@ 123456tums.ac.ir , Dr Mehrzad Saraei, Email: msaraei@ 123456qums.ac.ir
                Article
                jad-10-141
                4906753
                27308272
                956fb1c4-870f-4031-bee9-141a5adef0da
                Copyright© Iranian Society of Medical Entomology & Tehran University of Medical Sciences

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License which allows users to read, copy, distribute and make derivative works for non-commercial purposes from the material, as long as the author of the original work is cited properly.

                History
                : 20 September 2014
                : 29 September 2014
                Categories
                Original Article

                Infectious disease & Microbiology
                leishmania major,l. turanica,p. salehi,phlebotomus papatasi,iran
                Infectious disease & Microbiology
                leishmania major, l. turanica, p. salehi, phlebotomus papatasi, iran

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