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      Description of Candidatus Bartonella fadhilae n. sp. and Candidatus Bartonella sanaae n. sp. ( Bartonellaceae) from Dipodillus dasyurus and Sekeetamys calurus ( Gerbillinae) from the Sinai Massif (Egypt)

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          Abstract

          Bartonella spp. are parasites of mammalian erythrocytes and endothelial cells, transmitted by blood-feeding arthropod ectoparasites. Different species of rodents may constitute the main hosts of Bartonella, including several zoonotic species of Bartonella. The aim of this study was to identify and compare Bartonella species and genotypes isolated from rodent hosts from the South Sinai, Egypt. Prevalence of Bartonella infection was assessed in rodents (837 Acomys dimidiatus, 73 Acomys russatus, 111 Dipodillus dasyurus, and 65 Sekeetamys calurus) trapped in 2000, 2004, 2008, and 2012 in four dry montane wadis around St. Katherine town in the Sinai Mountains. Total DNA was extracted from blood samples, and PCR amplification and sequencing of the Bartonella-specific 860-bp gene fragment of rpoB and the 810-bp gene fragment of gltA were used for molecular and phylogenetic analyses. The overall prevalence of Bartonella in rodents was 7.2%. Prevalence differed between host species, being 30.6%, 10.8%, 9.6%, and 3.6% in D. dasyurus, S. calurus, A. russatus, and A. dimidiatus, respectively. The phylogenetic analyses of six samples of Bartonella (five from D. dasyurus and one from S. calurus) based on a fragment of the rpoB gene, revealed the existence of two distinct genetic groups (with 95–96% reciprocal sequence identity), clustering with several unidentified isolates obtained earlier from the same rodent species, and distant from species that have already been described (90–92% of sequence identity to the closest match from the GenBank reference database). Thus, molecular and phylogenetic analyses led to the description of two species: Candidatus Bartonella fadhilae n. sp. and Candidatus Bartonella sanaae n. sp. The identification of their vectors and the medical significance of these species need further investigation.

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          Most cited references43

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          Experimental transmission of Bartonella henselae by the cat flea.

          Bartonella henselae is an emerging bacterial pathogen, causing cat scratch disease and bacillary angiomatosis. Cats bacteremic with B. henselae constitute a large reservoir from which humans become infected. Prevention of human infection depends on elucidation of the natural history and means of feline infection. We studied 47 cattery cats in a private home for 12 months to determine the longitudinal prevalence of B. henselae bacteremia, the prevalence of B. henselae in the fleas infesting these cats, and whether B. henselae is transmitted experimentally to cats via fleas. Vector-mediated transmission of B.henselae isolates was evaluated by removing fleas from the naturally bacteremic, flea-infested cattery cats and transferring these fleas to specific-pathogen-free (SPF) kittens housed in a controlled, arthropod-free University Animal Facility. B. henselae bacteremia was detected in 89% of the 47 naturally infected cattery cats. A total of 132 fleas were removed from cats whose blood was simultaneously cultured during different seasons and were tested individually for the presence of B. henselae DNA by PCR. B. henselae DNA was detected in 34% of 132 fleas, with seasonal variation, but without an association between the presence or the level of bacteremia in the corresponding cat. Cat fleas removed from bacteremic cattery cats transmitted B. henselae to five SPF kittens in two separate experiments; however, control SPF kittens housed with highly bacteremic kittens in the absence of fleas did not become infected. These data demonstrate that the cat flea readily transmits B. henselae to cats. Control of feline infestation with this arthropod vector may provide an important strategy for the prevention of infection of both humans and cats.
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            Gene-sequence-based criteria for species definition in bacteriology: the Bartonella paradigm.

            The definition of new species is currently based on polyphasic classification that includes both determination of phenotypic characteristics and DNA-DNA homology. However, none of these techniques is convenient for the rapid characterization of fastidious or non-culturable bacteria. Using sequences available in the GenBank database, we compared the similarities of gene fragments among the currently recognized Bartonella species. This comparison led to both the definition of similarity values that discriminated Bartonella at the species level and assessment of the relative discriminatory power of each gene examined. In this perspective, rpoB and gltA were found to be the most potent.
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              Rochalimaea elizabethae sp. nov. isolated from a patient with endocarditis.

              A Rochalimaea-like organism (strain F9251) was isolated from a patient with endocarditis after blood drawn for culture before antimicrobial therapy was subcultured onto blood and chocolate agars and incubated for 2 weeks in 5% CO2. The strain was phenotypically similar to known Rochalimaea species. The cellular fatty acid composition of strain F9251 was close to but distinct from those of the three known Rochalimaea species and was most similar to that of R. vinsonii. Labeled DNA from strain F9251 was 59 to 67% related to DNAs from type strains of the three described Rochalimaea species, and its 16S rRNA gene sequence was 98.9% or more homologous to their 16S rRNA gene sequences. These findings support classification of F9251 as a new Rochalimaea species, for which the name Rochalimaea elizabethae sp. nov. is proposed. The patient infected with the organism had large bacterial vegetations on his aortic valve and was cured with antibiotics and valve-replacement surgery. Recognition of the procedures required to identify this and other Rochalimaea species suggests that clinical laboratories should prolong the incubation times of cultures of blood and tissue from patients with suspected endocarditis, patients with fever of unknown origin, and immunocompromised patients with fever so that the full spectrum of disease caused by these organisms can be recognized.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis
                Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis
                vbz
                Vector Borne and Zoonotic Diseases
                Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. (140 Huguenot Street, 3rd FloorNew Rochelle, NY 10801USA )
                1530-3667
                1557-7759
                01 July 2017
                01 July 2017
                01 July 2017
                : 17
                : 7
                : 483-494
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Biology, Institute of Zoology, University of Warsaw , Warsaw, Poland.
                [ 2 ]Desert Research Center , Cairo, Egypt.
                [ 3 ]Department of Forest Phytopathology, Faculty of Forestry, Poznań University of Life Sciences , Poznań, Poland.
                [ 4 ]Department of Bacterial Genetics, Faculty of Biology, Institute of Microbiology, University of Warsaw , Warsaw, Poland.
                [ 5 ]Department of Zoology, Suez Canal University , Ismailia, Egypt.
                [ 6 ]School of Life Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Nottingham , Nottingham, United Kingdom.
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to: Anna Bajer, Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Biology, Institute of Zoology, University of Warsaw 1 Miecznikowa Street, Warsaw 02-096, Poland

                E-mail: anabena@ 123456biol.uw.edu.pl
                Article
                10.1089/vbz.2016.2093
                10.1089/vbz.2016.2093
                5512320
                28541836
                d1f6ebf5-a937-4ca6-8446-574bf976e698
                © Mohammed Alsarraf et al. 2017; Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                Page count
                Figures: 3, Tables: 4, References: 46, Pages: 12
                Categories
                Original Articles

                acomys,bartonella,dipodillus dasyurus,genotypes,rodent,sekeetamys calurus,sinai

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