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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, Jul 1997, 1681-1686, Vol 35, No. 7
JM Lockhart, WR Davidson, DE Stallknecht, JE Dawson and EW Howerth
Field and experimental studies have implicated white-tailed deer
(Odocoileus virginianus) as probable reservoir hosts for Ehrlichia
chaffeensis, the causative agent of human monocytic ehrlichiosis, but
natural infection in deer has not been confirmed through isolation of E.
chaffeensis. Thirty-five white-tailed deer collected from three Amblyomma
americanum-infested populations in Georgia were examined for evidence of E.
chaffeensis infection by serologic, molecular, cell culture, and
xenodiagnostic methods. Twenty-seven deer (77%) had E. chaffeensis-reactive
indirect fluorescent-antibody assay titers of > or = 1:64; and the
blood, spleens, or lymph nodes of seven (20%) deer were positive in a
nested PCR assay with E. chaffeensis-specific primers. E. chaffeensis was
isolated in DH82 cell cultures from the blood of five (14%) deer, including
two deer that were PCR negative. Combination of culture and PCR results
indicated that six (17%) deer were probably rickettsemic and that nine
(26%) were probably infected. Restriction digestion of PCR products
amplified from deer tissues and cell culture isolates resulted in a banding
pattern consistent with the E. chaffeensis 16S rRNA gene sequence. The
sequences of all PCR products from deer tissues or cell culture isolates
were identical to the sequence of the Arkansas type strain of E.
chaffeensis. Xenodiagnosis with C3H mice inoculated intraperitoneally with
deer blood, spleen, or lymph node suspensions was unsuccessful. When viewed
in the context of previous studies, these findings provide strong evidence
that E. chaffeensis is maintained in nature primarily by a tick vector-
vertebrate reservoir system consisting of lone star ticks and white- tailed
deer.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Isolation of Ehrlichia chaffeensis from wild white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) confirms their role as natural reservoir hosts
Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study, The University of Georgia, Athens 30602, USA.
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