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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 07 1997, 1740-1745, Vol 35, No. 7
MS Ho, BC Barr, AF Tarantal, LT Lai, AG Hendrickx, AE Marsh, KW Sverlow, AE Packham and PA Conrad
Neospora is a newly recognized Toxoplasma-like cyst-forming coccidian
parasite that causes abortion or congenital infections in naturally or
experimentally infected animals. In this study, pregnant rhesus macaques
were inoculated with culture-derived tachyzoites of a bovine Neospora
isolate, and tissue samples from various major organs were collected from
dams and fetuses for the detection of parasite DNA by using oligonucleotide
primers COC-1 and COC-2 for PCR amplification of a conserved coccidial
nuclear small-subunit rRNA gene sequence, and amplification products were
confirmed by hybridization with a Neospora- specific DNA probe. PCR
products were amplified from DNAs of different fetal monkey tissues,
including brain, heart, lung, liver, spleen, skeletal muscle, skin, and
placenta. In addition, Neospora DNA was amplified from the brain, heart,
and lung tissues of infected rhesus macaque dams. The PCR and probe
hybridization system may provide an effective method for the detection of
Neospora infection in fetuses and dams from nonhuman primates and may be
useful in determining the zoonotic potential of Neospora.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Detection of Neospora from tissues of experimentally infected rhesus macaques by PCR and specific DNA probe hybridization
Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis 95616, USA.
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