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Journal ArticleDOI

First report of the isolation and molecular characterization of Rickettsia amblyommii and Rickettsia felis in Central America.

TLDR
This is the first report of a successful isolation in cell culture of R. amblyommii and R. felis from Central America.
Abstract
During 2010, 15 adult ticks, identified as Amblyomma cajennense, were collected from horses in Cahuita and Turrialba districts, whereas 7 fleas, identified as Ctenocephalides felis, were collected from a dog in San Jose city, Costa Rica. In the laboratory, three A. cajennense specimens, two from Cahuita and one from Turrialba, were individually processed for rickettsial isolation in cell culture, as was a pool of seven fleas. Rickettsiae were successfully isolated and established in Vero cell culture from the three ticks and from a pool of seven fleas in C6/36 cell culture. The three tick isolates were genotypically identified as Rickettsia amblyommii, and the flea isolate was identified as Rickettsia felis through DNA sequencing of portions of the rickettsial genes gltA, ompA, and ompB of each isolate. In addition, other seven ticks were shown to contain rickettsial DNA. Polymerase chain reaction products of at least two of these ticks were sequenced and also showed to correspond to R. amblyommi...

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Journal ArticleDOI

Rickettsia felis, an Emerging Flea-Borne Rickettsiosis

TL;DR: This is a comprehensive review examining what is known and unknown relative to R. felis transmission biology, epidemiology of the disease, and genetics, with an insight into areas of needed investigation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rickettsia felis : the complex journey of an emergent human pathogen

TL;DR: An update of the current knowledge about R. felis, an obligate intracellular bacterium that is different from other officially recognized rickettsial species, which is commonly detected in febrile patients in sub-Saharan Africa.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rickettsia amblyommatis sp. nov., a spotted fever group Rickettsia associated with multiple species of Amblyomma ticks in North, Central and South America.

TL;DR: Additional molecular evidence is provided to identify strain WB-8-2T as a representative strain of a unique rickettsial species and present a formal description for the species, with the proposed name modified to Rickettsia amblyommatis sp.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rickettsia Species Infecting Amblyomma cooperi Ticks from an Area in the State of São Paulo, Brazil, Where Brazilian Spotted Fever Is Endemic

TL;DR: Results do not support the role of A. cooperi in the ecology of R. rickettsii in the area studied, but they add two more species of ricksettsiae to the poorly developed list of species occurring in ticks in South America.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phylogenetic analysis of members of the genus Rickettsia using the gene encoding the outer-membrane protein rOmpB (ompB).

TL;DR: The current classification of the genus Rickettsia is inappropriate, specifically its division into two groups, typhus and spotted fever, and integration of phenotypic, genotypic and phylogenetic data will contribute to the definition of a polyphasic taxonomy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differentiation of spotted fever group rickettsiae by sequencing and analysis of restriction fragment length polymorphism of PCR-amplified DNA of the gene encoding the protein rOmpA.

TL;DR: A single PCR amplification was able to differentiate all of the SFG rickettsiae whose ompA gene was amplified by PCR, and the computer analysis-derived profiles by PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis were confirmed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecology of rickettsia in South America.

TL;DR: In Brazil, capybaras and opossums are the most probable amplifier hosts for R. rickettsii, among A. cajennense ticks, and small rodents for A. aureolatum, which implies that R. gaelic needs amplifier vertebrate hosts for its perpetuation in nature, in order to create new lines of infected ticks (horizontal transmission).
Journal ArticleDOI

Tick-Borne Diseases in North Carolina: Is “Rickettsia amblyommii” a Possible Cause of Rickettsiosis Reported as Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever?

TL;DR: It is proposed that some cases of rickettsiosis reported as RMSF may have been caused by "R. amblyommii" transmitted through the bite of A. americanum, a preferred hosts of lone star ticks.
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