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Molecular detection of <Emphasis Type="Italic">Rickettsia</Emphasis>, <Emphasis Type="Italic">Coxiella</Emphasis> and <Emphasis Type="Italic">Rickettsiella</Emphasis> DNA in three native Australian tick species
Authors:Inger-Marie E Vilcins  Julie M Old  Elizabeth Deane
Institution:(1) Department of Biological Sciences, E8A, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, 2109, Australia;(2) School of Natural Sciences, Building K2, Hawkesbury Campus, University of Western Sydney, Penrith South DC, NSW, 1797, Australia;(3) College of Science, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, 0200, Australia
Abstract:Three Australian native animal species yielded 60 samples composed of three indigenous ticks. Hosts included twelve koalas, two echidnas and one wombat from Victoria, and ticks were of the species Ixodes tasmani (n = 42), Bothriocroton concolor (n = 8) and B. auruginans (n = 10), respectively. PCR screening and sequencing detected a species of Coxiella, sharing closest sequence identity to C. burnetii (>98%), in all B. auruginans, as well as a species of Rickettsia, matching closest to R. massiliae, in 70% of the same samples. A genotype sharing closest similarity to Rickettsia bellii (>99%) was identified in three female B. concolor collected from one of the echidnas. Three samples of I. tasmani, taken from three koalas, yielded different genotypes of Rickettsiella. These results represent the first detection of the three genera in each tick species and identify a high level of previously undetected bacterial diversity in Australian ticks.
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