Cargando…

Seasonal Investigation of Anaplasma marginale Infection in Pakistani Cattle Reveals Hematological and Biochemical Changes, Multiple Associated Risk Factors and msp5 Gene Conservation

Bovine anaplasmosis is a tick-borne disease caused by an obligate intercellular Gram-negative bacterium named Anaplasma (A.) marginale. In this study, we report the seasonal prevalence, potentially associated risk factors and phylogeny of A. marginale in cattle of three different breeds from Multan...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Asif, Muhammad, Ben Said, Mourad, Vinueza, Rommel Lenin, Leon, Renato, Ahmad, Nadeem, Parveen, Asia, Khan, Adil, Ejaz, Arusa, Ali, Muhammad, Khan, Asmat Ullah, Baber, Muhammad, Iqbal, Furhan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9696815/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36365012
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens11111261
_version_ 1784838401993736192
author Asif, Muhammad
Ben Said, Mourad
Vinueza, Rommel Lenin
Leon, Renato
Ahmad, Nadeem
Parveen, Asia
Khan, Adil
Ejaz, Arusa
Ali, Muhammad
Khan, Asmat Ullah
Baber, Muhammad
Iqbal, Furhan
author_facet Asif, Muhammad
Ben Said, Mourad
Vinueza, Rommel Lenin
Leon, Renato
Ahmad, Nadeem
Parveen, Asia
Khan, Adil
Ejaz, Arusa
Ali, Muhammad
Khan, Asmat Ullah
Baber, Muhammad
Iqbal, Furhan
author_sort Asif, Muhammad
collection PubMed
description Bovine anaplasmosis is a tick-borne disease caused by an obligate intercellular Gram-negative bacterium named Anaplasma (A.) marginale. In this study, we report the seasonal prevalence, potentially associated risk factors and phylogeny of A. marginale in cattle of three different breeds from Multan District, Southern Punjab, Pakistan. A total of 1020 blood samples (crossbred, n = 340; Holstein Friesian, n = 340; and Sahiwal breed, n = 340) from apparently healthy cattle were collected on a seasonal basis from March 2020 to April 2021. Based on PCR amplification of the msp5 partial sequence, overall, the A. marginale prevalence rate was estimated at 11.1% (113/1020) of the analyzed cattle samples. According to seasons, the highest prevalence rate was observed in autumn (16.5%), followed by winter (10.6%) and summer (9.8%), and the lowest was recorded in the spring (7.5%). The crossbred and Sahiwal cattle were the most susceptible to A. marginale infection, followed by Holstein Friesian cattle (7.9%). Analysis of epidemiological factors revealed that cattle reared on farms where dairy animals have tick loads, dogs coinhabit with cattle and dogs have tick loads have a higher risk of being infected with A. marginale. In addition, it was observed that white blood cell, lymphocyte (%), monocyte (%), hematocrit, mean corpuscular hemoglobin and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentrations were significantly disturbed in A. marginale-positive cattle compared with non-infested cattle. Genetic analysis of nucleotide sequences and a phylogenetic study based on msp5 partial sequencing demonstrated that this gene appears to be highly conserved among our isolates and those infecting apparently healthy cattle from geographically diverse worldwide regions. The presented data are crucial for estimating the risk of bovine anaplasmosis in order to develop integrated control policies against bovine anaplasmosis and other tick-borne diseases infecting cattle in the country.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9696815
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-96968152022-11-26 Seasonal Investigation of Anaplasma marginale Infection in Pakistani Cattle Reveals Hematological and Biochemical Changes, Multiple Associated Risk Factors and msp5 Gene Conservation Asif, Muhammad Ben Said, Mourad Vinueza, Rommel Lenin Leon, Renato Ahmad, Nadeem Parveen, Asia Khan, Adil Ejaz, Arusa Ali, Muhammad Khan, Asmat Ullah Baber, Muhammad Iqbal, Furhan Pathogens Article Bovine anaplasmosis is a tick-borne disease caused by an obligate intercellular Gram-negative bacterium named Anaplasma (A.) marginale. In this study, we report the seasonal prevalence, potentially associated risk factors and phylogeny of A. marginale in cattle of three different breeds from Multan District, Southern Punjab, Pakistan. A total of 1020 blood samples (crossbred, n = 340; Holstein Friesian, n = 340; and Sahiwal breed, n = 340) from apparently healthy cattle were collected on a seasonal basis from March 2020 to April 2021. Based on PCR amplification of the msp5 partial sequence, overall, the A. marginale prevalence rate was estimated at 11.1% (113/1020) of the analyzed cattle samples. According to seasons, the highest prevalence rate was observed in autumn (16.5%), followed by winter (10.6%) and summer (9.8%), and the lowest was recorded in the spring (7.5%). The crossbred and Sahiwal cattle were the most susceptible to A. marginale infection, followed by Holstein Friesian cattle (7.9%). Analysis of epidemiological factors revealed that cattle reared on farms where dairy animals have tick loads, dogs coinhabit with cattle and dogs have tick loads have a higher risk of being infected with A. marginale. In addition, it was observed that white blood cell, lymphocyte (%), monocyte (%), hematocrit, mean corpuscular hemoglobin and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentrations were significantly disturbed in A. marginale-positive cattle compared with non-infested cattle. Genetic analysis of nucleotide sequences and a phylogenetic study based on msp5 partial sequencing demonstrated that this gene appears to be highly conserved among our isolates and those infecting apparently healthy cattle from geographically diverse worldwide regions. The presented data are crucial for estimating the risk of bovine anaplasmosis in order to develop integrated control policies against bovine anaplasmosis and other tick-borne diseases infecting cattle in the country. MDPI 2022-10-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9696815/ /pubmed/36365012 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens11111261 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Asif, Muhammad
Ben Said, Mourad
Vinueza, Rommel Lenin
Leon, Renato
Ahmad, Nadeem
Parveen, Asia
Khan, Adil
Ejaz, Arusa
Ali, Muhammad
Khan, Asmat Ullah
Baber, Muhammad
Iqbal, Furhan
Seasonal Investigation of Anaplasma marginale Infection in Pakistani Cattle Reveals Hematological and Biochemical Changes, Multiple Associated Risk Factors and msp5 Gene Conservation
title Seasonal Investigation of Anaplasma marginale Infection in Pakistani Cattle Reveals Hematological and Biochemical Changes, Multiple Associated Risk Factors and msp5 Gene Conservation
title_full Seasonal Investigation of Anaplasma marginale Infection in Pakistani Cattle Reveals Hematological and Biochemical Changes, Multiple Associated Risk Factors and msp5 Gene Conservation
title_fullStr Seasonal Investigation of Anaplasma marginale Infection in Pakistani Cattle Reveals Hematological and Biochemical Changes, Multiple Associated Risk Factors and msp5 Gene Conservation
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal Investigation of Anaplasma marginale Infection in Pakistani Cattle Reveals Hematological and Biochemical Changes, Multiple Associated Risk Factors and msp5 Gene Conservation
title_short Seasonal Investigation of Anaplasma marginale Infection in Pakistani Cattle Reveals Hematological and Biochemical Changes, Multiple Associated Risk Factors and msp5 Gene Conservation
title_sort seasonal investigation of anaplasma marginale infection in pakistani cattle reveals hematological and biochemical changes, multiple associated risk factors and msp5 gene conservation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9696815/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36365012
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens11111261
work_keys_str_mv AT asifmuhammad seasonalinvestigationofanaplasmamarginaleinfectioninpakistanicattlerevealshematologicalandbiochemicalchangesmultipleassociatedriskfactorsandmsp5geneconservation
AT bensaidmourad seasonalinvestigationofanaplasmamarginaleinfectioninpakistanicattlerevealshematologicalandbiochemicalchangesmultipleassociatedriskfactorsandmsp5geneconservation
AT vinuezarommellenin seasonalinvestigationofanaplasmamarginaleinfectioninpakistanicattlerevealshematologicalandbiochemicalchangesmultipleassociatedriskfactorsandmsp5geneconservation
AT leonrenato seasonalinvestigationofanaplasmamarginaleinfectioninpakistanicattlerevealshematologicalandbiochemicalchangesmultipleassociatedriskfactorsandmsp5geneconservation
AT ahmadnadeem seasonalinvestigationofanaplasmamarginaleinfectioninpakistanicattlerevealshematologicalandbiochemicalchangesmultipleassociatedriskfactorsandmsp5geneconservation
AT parveenasia seasonalinvestigationofanaplasmamarginaleinfectioninpakistanicattlerevealshematologicalandbiochemicalchangesmultipleassociatedriskfactorsandmsp5geneconservation
AT khanadil seasonalinvestigationofanaplasmamarginaleinfectioninpakistanicattlerevealshematologicalandbiochemicalchangesmultipleassociatedriskfactorsandmsp5geneconservation
AT ejazarusa seasonalinvestigationofanaplasmamarginaleinfectioninpakistanicattlerevealshematologicalandbiochemicalchangesmultipleassociatedriskfactorsandmsp5geneconservation
AT alimuhammad seasonalinvestigationofanaplasmamarginaleinfectioninpakistanicattlerevealshematologicalandbiochemicalchangesmultipleassociatedriskfactorsandmsp5geneconservation
AT khanasmatullah seasonalinvestigationofanaplasmamarginaleinfectioninpakistanicattlerevealshematologicalandbiochemicalchangesmultipleassociatedriskfactorsandmsp5geneconservation
AT babermuhammad seasonalinvestigationofanaplasmamarginaleinfectioninpakistanicattlerevealshematologicalandbiochemicalchangesmultipleassociatedriskfactorsandmsp5geneconservation
AT iqbalfurhan seasonalinvestigationofanaplasmamarginaleinfectioninpakistanicattlerevealshematologicalandbiochemicalchangesmultipleassociatedriskfactorsandmsp5geneconservation