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1.
Of 50 cases that gave negative immunofluorescence reaction with Rickettsia tsutsugamushi among patients with suspected tsutsugamushi disease encountered in Miyazaki Prefecture during the last four years, three showed a significant rise in the antibody titer to Rickettsia montana, a species of spotted fever group. This paper reports evidence for the occurrence of the rickettsial infection of the spotted fever group in Kyushu, Japan.  相似文献   

2.
Bats and their ectoparasites are associated with bacterial agents of unknown pathogenicity. We tested sera from 56 Eptesicus fuscus from Georgia against Borrelia hermsii, Orientia tsutsugamushi, Rickettsia conorii, and Rickettsia rickettsii. We detected antibodies reactive against a relapsing fever Borrelia and spotted fever group Rickettsia in 3/56 and 1/56 bats, respectively. We attempted to culture Bartonella from the blood of these bats but were unsuccessful. In addition, we fed bat ticks, Carios kelleyi, infected with Rickettsia on a specific pathogen-free guinea pig. The guinea pig had a weak seroconversion to R. rickettsii with a peak titer of 1:32 starting on day 14. Rickettsia was not detected in any of the tissue samples from the guinea pig by molecular means. Our results indicate that E. fuscus is naturally exposed to both a spotted fever group Rickettsia and a relapsing fever group Borrelia. If these agents are transmitted by bat ticks, then people living in close proximity to bat ticks might be exposed.  相似文献   

3.
Plaque Assay for Q Fever and Scrub Typhus Rickettsiae   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
The plaque assay procedure developed for spotted fever and typhus group rickettsiae is also appropriate for scrub typhus and Q fever rickettsiae. The plaque titers of suspensions of Rickettsia tsutsugamushi and Coxiella burnetii compared favorably with end points obtained by titrations in mice.  相似文献   

4.
Spotted fever group rickettsiosis in Japan   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The acute febrile disease with characteristic rash encountered in Tokushima Prefecture was proved to be a spotted fever group rickettsiosis, which showed a significant rise in agglutinins to both Proteus OX2 and OX19 and significantly high levels of CF antibodies to Rickettsia akari and Rickettsia rickettsii.  相似文献   

5.
A spotted fever group rickettsia was isolated from Apodemus mice captured near the site where a person had been infected in Miyazaki Prefecture. Antigenic characteristics of the isolate designated as strain TO-1 were compared with those of Rickettsia japonica (strain YH) and Rickettsia montana (ATCC VR611) by the indirect fluorescent antibody test with 14 serum specimens obtained from Apodemus speciosus, immune rat antisera against the strains TO-1 and YH, and three patients' sera. The titers of these sera measured with strain TO-1 were identical to those with strain YH, suggesting the antigenic similarity between these two organisms. It was also suggested that Apodemus speciosus is likely to be an important vertebrate host for a spotted fever group rickettsia in Japan.  相似文献   

6.
The present study was undertaken to investigate the ability of members of two different groups of Rickettsia to stimulate macrophages or immune lymphocytes to produce TNF. It was found that R. conorii, a spotted fever group rickettsia, readily induced murine peritoneal macrophages or the macrophage-like cell line P388D1 to produce relatively high levels of TNF. The interaction of macrophages with viable organisms or heat-killed organisms resulted in TNF production. In contrast, viable or killed R. tsutsugamushi did not stimulate the production of detectable TNF even though viable organisms grew to high numbers in both cell types. It was found that the appropriate immune spleen cells stimulated with heat-killed R. tsutsugamushi or R. conorii produced TNF, and TNF activity was found in the sera of immune mice after injection with rickettsial antigen. Infection of naive mice with viable R. tsutsugamushi resulted in high TNF levels in ascites, but TNF was not found in ascites obtained from infected athymic (nu/nu) mice. These data support the suggestion that spotted fever group rickettsiae, such as R. conorii, possess components perhaps on the surface that interact with macrophages to induce TNF production and this component is lacking in R. tsutsugamushi. Antigens of R. tsutsugamushi and R. conorii will stimulate immune cells to produce TNF activity. These data are compatible with the suggestion that the TH-1 subset of T cells is predominant in immunity to R. tsutsugamushi.  相似文献   

7.
In early April 2000, tick-borne pathogens were surveyed in the northern area of Okinawajima Island, Okinawa Prefecture, which is the southernmost area of Japan. Borrelia valaisiana, a Lyme disease spirochete, was isolated from a field mouse Mus calori, and unidentified rickettsiae of the spotted fever group were isolated from all stages of Amblyomma testudinarium. These are the first reports of these pathogens on Okinawajima Island.  相似文献   

8.
Fourteen of Apodemus speciosus (large Japanese field mouse) were captured near the place where one of the patients with spotted fever group rickettsiosis had been infected, in Takaoka town, Miyazaki Prefecture. In the town, four human cases were reported. All of the mice had antibodies against Rickettsia japonica and R. montana. The incidence of the antibody was significantly higher in Apodemus mice in the area than in those from nonendemic area.  相似文献   

9.
Typhus exanthematicus, Rocky Mountain fever, and the tsutsugamushi disease have been classified in the "typhus group" by Megaw, as louse-typhus, tick-typhus, and mite-typhus. He has added a fourth-class, comprising typhus-like fevers, with unknown vectors. It is the diseases of this class with which this paper is concerned.Endemic typhus (Brill's disease) is very closely related to typhus fever; the Weil-Felix reaction is positive, typhus-like vascular lesions are present, and there is cross-immunity with typhus. In the exanthematic fever of Marseilles the relationship is more superficial; there is neither cross-immunity nor vascular lesion, and the Weil-Felix reaction is negative. Some, e.g., the scrub-typhus of Malaya (vector probably a mite), are more nearly related to tsutsugamushi than to typhus; others, e.g., Indian "tick-typhus" (vector probably a tick), to Rocky Mountain fever.All are non-contagious, non-epidemic, warm-weather diseases. They are unassociated with dirt, squalor, or lice, and are restricted to definite foci. Probably rodents or other animals are the reservoirs of the virus. On the question of identity with typhus, health authorities decide that notification is unnecessary; typhus introduced into America spreads, Brill's disease does not.These typhus-like diseases are not the same in all the countries where they occur. There are two main groups: (1) an urban group, more closely related to typhus, in which the Weil-Felix reaction is positive; (2) a rural group, more closely related to tsutsugamushi and Rocky Mountain fever, in which the Weil-Felix reaction is negative. There is a special non-indologenic strain of B. proteus, which is agglutinated in some of the fevers belonging to the second group.TROPICAL TYPHUS IN THE MALAY STATES: (1) urban form, or "shop-typhus," resembling Brill's disease; (2) rural form or "scrub-typhus." Peculiar association with oil-palms and coarse grass.  相似文献   

10.
We present the draft genome for the Rickettsia endosymbiont of Ixodes scapularis (REIS), a symbiont of the deer tick vector of Lyme disease in North America. Among Rickettsia species (Alphaproteobacteria: Rickettsiales), REIS has the largest genome sequenced to date (>2 Mb) and contains 2,309 genes across the chromosome and four plasmids (pREIS1 to pREIS4). The most remarkable finding within the REIS genome is the extraordinary proliferation of mobile genetic elements (MGEs), which contributes to a limited synteny with other Rickettsia genomes. In particular, an integrative conjugative element named RAGE (for Rickettsiales amplified genetic element), previously identified in scrub typhus rickettsiae (Orientia tsutsugamushi) genomes, is present on both the REIS chromosome and plasmids. Unlike the pseudogene-laden RAGEs of O. tsutsugamushi, REIS encodes nine conserved RAGEs that include F-like type IV secretion systems similar to that of the tra genes encoded in the Rickettsia bellii and R. massiliae genomes. An unparalleled abundance of encoded transposases (>650) relative to genome size, together with the RAGEs and other MGEs, comprise ~35% of the total genome, making REIS one of the most plastic and repetitive bacterial genomes sequenced to date. We present evidence that conserved rickettsial genes associated with an intracellular lifestyle were acquired via MGEs, especially the RAGE, through a continuum of genomic invasions. Robust phylogeny estimation suggests REIS is ancestral to the virulent spotted fever group of rickettsiae. As REIS is not known to invade vertebrate cells and has no known pathogenic effects on I. scapularis, its genome sequence provides insight on the origin of mechanisms of rickettsial pathogenicity.  相似文献   

11.
Scrub typhus and tick-borne spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsioses are transmitted by chiggers (larval trombiculid mites) and hard ticks, respectively. We assessed exposure to these disease vectors by extensively sampling both chiggers and ticks and their small mammal hosts in eastern Taiwan during 2007 and 2008. The striped field mouse Apodemus agrarius Pallas (Rodentia: Muridae) was the most common of the small mammals (36.1% of 1393 captures) and presented the highest rate of infestation with both chiggers (47.8% of 110 760) and ticks (78.1% of 1431). Leptotrombidium imphalum Vercammen-Grandjean & Langston (Trombidiformes: Trombiculidae) and immature Rhipicephalus haemaphysaloides Supino (Ixodida: Ixodidae) were the most abundant chiggers (84.5%) and ticks (>99%) identified, respectively. Immunofluorescent antibody assay revealed high seropositive rates of rodents against Orientia tsutsugamushi Hyashi (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae), the aetiological agent of scrub typhus (70.0% of 437 rodents), and tick-borne SFG rickettsiae (91.9% of 418 rodents). The current study represents a first step towards elucidating the potential hosts and vectors in the enzootic transmission of O. tsutsugamushi and tick-borne SFG rickettsiae in Taiwan. Further studies should focus on characterizing pathogens in L. imphalum and R. haemaphysaloides, as well as the proclivity of both vectors to humans. Uncovering the main hosts of adult ticks is also critical for the prevention of SFG rickettsial infections.  相似文献   

12.
Three strains of Orientia tsutsugamushi were isolated from patients in Anan City, Tokushima Prefecture. The strains were identified as Karp type by analyses of reactivities with type-specific monoclonal antibodies. One strain, Okazaki, was isolated in L cells cultivated at 31 C, but not in cells at 36 C or in mice. This strain showed better growth at 31 C than 36 C. This is the first report of an O. tsutsugamushi strain which grows preferentially at low temperatures.  相似文献   

13.
Japanese isolates of spotted fever group rickettsiae were observed under a transmission electron microscope. In Vero cells persistently infected with Japanese isolates, small numbers of intracytoplasmic rickettsiae were seen. On the other hand, moderate numbers of rickettsiae were found in the cytoplasm of productively infected BHK cells. The electron-lucent, halo-like zone was found to surround organisms in the cytoplasm of their host cells, which is a prominent characteristic of spotted fever group rickettsiae. Fine structural features of the cell wall revealed thin outer and thick inner leaflets like those observed in other spotted fever group rickettsiae.  相似文献   

14.
T. Oda  C. Tanaka  M. Tsuda 《Mycoscience》2002,43(4):0351-0355
 Two new species from Japan, Amanita areolata and Amanita griseoturcosa, are described. The former, found in a broad-leaved forest in Aichi Prefecture, is a medium- to large-sized mushroom characterized by an areolate, brownish pileus, a nonstriate and appendiculate margin of the pileus, and amyloid basidiospores. The latter, found in forests with Fagaceae or Pinaceae in Tokyo, Chiba Prefecture, and Miyagi Prefecture, is a medium-sized mushroom characterized by a grayish-turquoise pileus, a nonstriate margin of the pileus, a saccate volva, an apical membranous annulus, and amyloid basidiospores. Received: July 10, 2001 / Accepted: June 5, 2002  相似文献   

15.
Candidatus Rickettsia andeanae was identified during an investigation of a febrile outbreak in northwestern Peru (2002). DNA sequencing from two ticks (Amblyomma maculatum, Ixodes boliviensis) collected during the investigation revealed a novel Rickettsia agent with similarity to the spotted fever group rickettsiae. Since then, Candidatus R.?andeanae has been detected in A.?maculatum ticks collected in the southeastern and southcentral United States, Argentina, and Peru. To date, Candidatus R.?andeanae has not been successfully cultivated in the laboratory. We present evidence for the continuous cultivation in three cell lines of Candidatus R.?andeanae isolated from an A.?maculatum tick (Portsmouth, Virginia).  相似文献   

16.
We propose the name Rickettsia japonica sp. nov. (with type strain YH [= ATCC VR-1363]) for a serologically specific species of spotted fever group rickettsiae that are pathogenic for humans (J. Infect. Dis. 159:1122-1126, 1989; J. Clin. Microbiol. 28:1177-1180, 1990). The biologic and genomic characteristics of the organism (G+C content, 31.2 +/- 0.7 mol%) are essentially the same as those of other pathogenic spotted fever group rickettsiae, although the R. japonica isolates cause a persistent infection in Vero cells for many subcultures.  相似文献   

17.
The authors present the results of a 6-year study of tsutsugamushi fever at the Kuril islands. The area of the disease proved to include Southern Kuril islands - Shikotan and Kunashir. The principal natural carriers of tsutsugamushi among the mouse-like rodents and trombiculidae larvae were revealed; highly virulent strains were found to prevail among the tsutsugamushi rickettsia strains. Tsutsugamushi fever in the population is characterized by a benign course, pyrexia, primary affects and lymphadenitis.  相似文献   

18.
T. Kobayashi 《Mycoscience》2002,43(3):0207-0211
 Three species of the genus Inocybe are reported as new species or new records from Japan. Inocybe phaeodisca Kühner var. geophylloides Kühner is redescribed by specimens collected in Chiba Prefecture; this is the first record of I. phaeodisca var. geophylloides for Japan. Inocybe pseudoreducta Stangl & Glowinski is also redescribed by materials collected in Hokkaido and Chiba Prefecture, new to Japan. Inocybe subtilis Takahito Kobayashi sp. nov. is proposed for material collected from Tokyo. The sectional position of this species is noted. Received: January 4, 2002 / Accepted: February 25, 2002  相似文献   

19.
Rickettsia tsutsugamushi strains from three recent patients of Tsutsugamushi disease in Niigata Prefecture were isolated primarily in mice and then in L cell cultures. By this procedure, low virulent strains to mice, as well as high virulent ones, could be isolated and cultivated serially in L cell cultures, suggesting the usefulness of L cells for isolation of this species of rickettsia. Each newly isolated strain was identified as a member of R. tsutsugamushi from the results of cross immunological tests and morphological observation. On the other hand, it was recognized that one of these rickettsiae showed immunological properties distinguishable from the prototype strains of Kato, Karp, and Gilliam by the cross complement fixation test, and also had low virulence in mice.  相似文献   

20.
A rickettsial strain IO-1 has been isolated from a tick, Ixodes ovatus, in Japan and genetically identified as Rickettsia helvetica, a member of the spotted fever group rickettsiae. Ultrastructural observations were made on the microorganism. The ultrastructure of R. helvetica IO-1 appeared to be generally the same as that previously shown for other rickettsiae of the spotted fever and typhus groups. The rickettsiae were primarily found free in the cytoplasm of L929 cultured cells. Occasionally, the rickettsiae may also invade the host cell nucleus; however, the frequency of the nuclear localization was very low.  相似文献   

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