Eriks I S, Stiller D, Palmer G H
Department of Veterinary Microbiology and Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Washington State University, Pullman 99164-7040.
J Clin Microbiol. 1993 Aug;31(8):2091-6. doi: 10.1128/jcm.31.8.2091-2096.1993.
Anaplasma marginale, an intraerythrocytic rickettsia of cattle, is transmitted biologically by ticks. Because of the brevity of acute A. marginale infection, transmission may rely on the tick's ability to acquire the organism from persistently infected cattle with low rickettsemia levels. By using a nucleic acid probe to quantitate low-level infection, we found that rickettsemia levels in persistently infected cattle fluctuated at approximately 5-week intervals during a 24-week period, from < 10(4) infected erythrocytes per ml of blood to high levels of approximately 10(7) infected erythrocytes per ml of blood. Cattle maintained very low rickettsemia levels (< 10(4.3) infected erythrocytes per ml of blood) for approximately 4 to 8 days of every 5-week cycle. The effect of fluctuations in rickettsemia in persistently infected cattle on acquisition by Dermacentor andersoni nymphal and adult male ticks was examined. A positive correlation was observed between rickettsemia levels in cattle and the resulting infection rates of ticks. At high rickettsemia levels, up to 80% of ticks acquired infection, but even at extremely low rickettsemia levels, 27% of adult male ticks became infected. Moreover, once ticks acquired infection, biological replication of the organism within the ticks appeared to make up for initial differences in the infecting dose. The high infection rates in adult males, combined with their intermittent feeding behavior and the observation that only a few infected ticks were required for transmission to a susceptible host, suggest that adult male D. andersoni ticks are epidemiologically important in A. marginale transmission. Because cattle with all levels of rickettsemia were capable of efficient transmission to ticks, population control efforts must include decreasing transmission from persistently infected individuals.
边缘无形体是牛的一种红细胞内立克次氏体,通过蜱进行生物传播。由于急性边缘无形体感染持续时间较短,传播可能依赖于蜱从立克次氏体血症水平较低的持续感染牛身上获取病原体的能力。通过使用核酸探针定量低水平感染,我们发现持续感染牛的立克次氏体血症水平在24周内以大约5周的间隔波动,从每毫升血液中少于10⁴个感染红细胞到每毫升血液中约10⁷个感染红细胞的高水平。牛在每5周周期的大约4至8天内维持非常低的立克次氏体血症水平(每毫升血液中少于10⁴·³个感染红细胞)。研究了持续感染牛的立克次氏体血症波动对安德逊革蜱若虫和成年雄蜱获取病原体的影响。观察到牛的立克次氏体血症水平与蜱的感染率之间呈正相关。在高立克次氏体血症水平时,高达80%的蜱被感染,但即使在极低的立克次氏体血症水平下,27%的成年雄蜱也会被感染。此外,一旦蜱获得感染,病原体在蜱体内的生物复制似乎弥补了初始感染剂量的差异。成年雄蜱的高感染率,加上它们间歇性的取食行为以及观察到向易感宿主传播只需少数感染蜱,表明安德逊革蜱成年雄蜱在边缘无形体传播中具有重要的流行病学意义。由于所有立克次氏体血症水平的牛都能够有效地将病原体传播给蜱,种群控制措施必须包括减少来自持续感染个体的传播。