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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, January 1999, p. 209-210, Vol. 37, No. 1
0095-1137/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Identity of Ehrlichial DNA Sequences Derived from Ixodes
ricinus Ticks with Those Obtained from Patients with Human
Granulocytic Ehrlichiosis in Slovenia
M.
Petrovec,1,*
J. W.
Sumner,2
W. L.
Nicholson,2
J. E.
Childs,2
F.
Strle,3
J.
Barli
,1
S.
Lotri
-Furlan,1 and
T.
Av
i
upanc1
Institute of Microbiology and Immunology,
Medical Faculty, University of Ljubljana,1 and
Department of Infectious Diseases, University Medical
Center,3 Ljubljana, Slovenia, and
Viral
and Rickettsial Zoonoses Branch, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia2
Received 25 June 1998/Returned for modification 7 August
1998/Accepted 2 October 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
Adult Ixodes ricinus (Acari: Ixodidae) ticks collected
near Ljubljana, Slovenia, were tested for the agent of human
granulocytic ehrlichiosis (HGE) by using PCR assays based on the 16S
rRNA gene. Three (3.2%) of 93 ticks were found to contain granulocytic
ehrlichiae. Nucleotide sequences of portions of the bacterial
groESL heat shock operon amplified from these ticks were
identical or nearly (99.8%) identical to those previously determined
for human patients with HGE from Slovenia, providing additional
evidence that the ticks were infected with the HGE agent. This study
identified I. ricinus as the likely vector for these
ehrlichial pathogens of humans in this part of Europe.
 |
TEXT |
In 1996, four cases of human
granulocytic ehrlichiosis (HGE) were identified near Ljubljana,
Slovenia (5, 8). All four patients reported exposure
to ticks, and none had traveled outside of Slovenia within the putative
incubation period. The aim of this study was to collect Ixodes
ricinus ticks from the Ljubljana area to determine if they were
infected with an ehrlichial species and, if so, to assess the DNA
sequence homologies between amplicons derived from ticks with those
obtained from three of the patients (one patient developed antibodies
to the HGE agent, but no ehrlichial DNA was recovered). I. ricinus is the most abundant tick in central Slovenia, and this
species typically comprises more than 98% of the ticks recovered
during tick sampling (9, 11). In Slovenia, as in other
European countries, I. ricinus is the main vector of the
causative agents of Lyme borreliosis and tick-borne encephalitis (9, 11). In Europe, the tick I. ricinus is known
as a vector of the agent causing tick-borne fever (Ehrlichia
phagocytophila) (14).
In early summer of 1996, 101 unfed adult I. ricinus ticks
were collected by flagging vegetation. The collection site was a woodland with clearings in which the major tree species were
immature birch (Betula pendula), oak (Quercus
cerris), hazel (Corylus avellana), and pine
(Pinus silvestris) trees, and the undergrowth was
predominantly fern (Pteridium aquilinum) and bilberry
(Vaccinium myrtillus) shrubs. All ticks were collected
at the same location near Ljubljana, and gender and species were
identified by an entomologist. DNA was extracted by first digesting
individual ticks overnight in TE buffer supplemented with
detergent (1 mM EDTA, 1% Tween, 1% Nonidet P-40) and proteinase
K (2,500 µg/ml), followed by phenol-chloroform-isoamyl alcohol
extraction and ethanol precipitation. To confirm that the DNA
extraction was successful, PCR assays were conducted as previously
described to amplify 16S mitochondrial rRNA genes (rDNA) of tick origin
(3).
To examine for ehrlichial DNA, each sample was tested with
separate primer pairs specific for the 16S rDNAs of E. chaffeensis and the E. phagocytophila
genogroup (1, 2, 6). For amplification of the
groESL region of the DNA extracted from ticks, primers HS1
and HS6 were used in the primary PCRs, and 1-µl aliquots of the first
reactions were used as templates for nested reactions with primers HS43
and HSVR (Fig. 1) (5, 10). The
groESL PCR would also amplify the homologous region of the
E. chaffeensis groESL operon if it were present in the
extracted DNA. Amplification of portions of the groESL
operon from the blood of three of the patients with HGE has been
previously described (5).

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FIG. 1.
Diagram indicating PCR primer positions and amplicon
sizes. Primers HS1 and HS6 were used in primary PCRs, and amplicons
produced in nested PCRs with the indicated primers were sequenced. The
nucleotide sequence of the 1,256-bp region flanked by primers HS43 and
HSVR was obtained from five of six samples, two of three human
patients, and three I. ricinus ticks. Sequences of the
regions flanked by primers HS43 and HS45 (442 bp) and primers HSVF and
HSVR (395 bp) were obtained from the remaining human patient. The
overapping sequences from five samples were identical in
size. The sequence from one of the female ticks contained three single
nucleotide substitutions: A to G at position 51, G to A at
position 450, and T to C at position 660. The sequences were numbered
by designating the A of the groEL translation initiation
codon nucleotide 1. The nucleotide substitutions did not alter the
deduced amino acid sequence.
|
|
Among 101 adult I. ricinus ticks, there were 55 females and
46 males. Mitochondrial 16S rDNA of tick origin was successfully amplified in 92.1% of the samples. Of the 93 ticks from which tick DNA
was successfully extracted, 3 (1 male and 2 female ticks) were positive
when tested with primers (Ehr 521 and Ehr 790) specific for the 16S
rDNA of the E. phagocytophila genogroup. All three of
these ticks also yielded amplicons of the expected length (1,293 bp)
for granulocytic Ehrlichia spp. when tested by the nested groESL PCR (Fig. 1). Negative PCR results were
obtained for all of the ticks with primers (HE1 and HE3) specific
for the E. chaffeensis 16S rDNA. In this report,
we use the terms granulocytic Ehrlichia spp. and
granulocytic ehrlichiosis in reference to E. phagocytophila sensu lato.
Sequencing of the PCR products obtained by the HS43 and HSVR
primers permitted us to examine a 1,256-bp region (when primer sequences were removed) of the groESL operon that has been
known to exhibit variation among strains of granulocytic ehrlichiae (10). Two of the tick sequences were identical to each other and to the corresponding 1,256-bp sequences previously amplified from one of the Slovenian HGE patients (GenBank accession no. AF033101)
from which ehrlichial DNA was obtained. The sequence from the third
tick (female) differed from the other groESL sequences at
three nucleotide positions (99.8% homology). These differences occurred in the groEL coding sequence and did not
alter the deduced amino acid sequence. Two smaller regions of the
groESL operon that overlap the 1,256-bp region
defined by primers HS43 and HSVR were previously amplified from the
other two Slovenian HGE patients (5) from which ehrlichial
DNA was obtained. These regions are flanked by primers HS43 and HS45
(442 bp) and primers HSVF and HSVR (395 bp) (Fig. 1) (5,
10). The full 1,256-bp sequence was amplified and sequenced for
one of these patients during this study and was found to be identical
to the 1,256-bp sequence from the first patient (GenBank accession no.
AF033101). We did not have a sufficient sample to obtain the full
1,256-bp sequence from the remaining patient. However, the sequences
previously amplified from this patient were identical to the
overlapping regions of the 1,256-bp sequence (GenBank accession no.
AF033101) from the other patients. The groESL sequences from
the Slovenian patients and ticks were more similar to sequences
previously obtained from European strains of E. phagocytophila than to groESL sequences amplified from E. equi and North American strains of
the HGE agent (5, 10).
Researchers from Scotland, Italy, Sweden, and France have reported
detection of granulocytic Ehrlichia spp. in I. ricinus ticks by means of electron microscopy and PCR assays
(4, 7, 12, 13). The prevalence of infection of I. ricinus ticks by granulocytic Ehrlichia detected by our
methods in Slovenia was much lower (3.2%) than the 24.4% prevalence
found in ticks collected from Italy (4) but
indistinguishable from the prevalence (3.1%) reported from the eastern
coast of Sweden (12). It should be noted that we tested only
adult stages of I. ricinus, while the cited studies reported
results from nymphal ticks (except reference 7).
To our knowledge, this is the first study in which ehrlichial DNA
sequences derived from ticks and HGE patients from the same location in
Europe were compared. The identity of these ehrlichial sequences
implicate I. ricinus as a vector of E. phagocytophila, or closely related agents, in Slovenia. The
public health and biologic significance of variation among
ehrlichial groESL sequences amplified from ticks and
patients cannot be determined at this time. Further studies in Slovenia
will assess the prevalence of ehrlichial infection among I. ricinus ticks in various life stages and identify the maintenance
cycle in reservoir and vector species that may ultimately lead to
human infection.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
Financial support for this research was provided in part by grant
L3-7916-381-95 from the Ministry of Science and Technology, Republic of Slovenia.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute of
Microbiology and Immunology, Zalo
ka 4, 1105 Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Phone: 386 61 316 593. Fax: 386 61 302 895. E-mail:
petrovec{at}mf.uni-lj.si.
 |
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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, January 1999, p. 209-210, Vol. 37, No. 1
0095-1137/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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