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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, June 2002, p. 2176-2181, Vol. 40, No. 6
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.6.2176-2181.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Genetic Identification of Rickettsiae Isolated from Ticks in Japan
Pierre-Edouard Fournier,1 Hiromi Fujita,2 Nobuhiro Takada,3 and Didier Raoult1*
Unité des Rickettsies, Faculté de Médecine, CNRS UMR 6020 27, Université de la Méditerranée, 13385 Marseille, Cedex 05, France,1
Ohara Research Laboratory, Ohara General Hospital, Fukushima 960-0195,2
Department of Immunology and Medical Zoology, Fukui Medical University, Matsuoka, Fukui 910-1193, Japan3
Received 7 January 2002/
Returned for modification 2 March 2002/
Accepted 24 March 2002

ABSTRACT
Following the description in Japan of Japanese spotted fever,
caused by
Rickettsia japonica, a search for the vector of this
disease led to the isolation of several rickettsiae from various
tick species. Sixty-three rickettsial isolates were obtained
from six different tick species, and six type strains were described
by PCR and monoclonal antibody testing. We identified these
six strains by amplification and sequencing of the genes encoding
16S rRNA and citrate synthase. We confirmed that the isolates
from
Dermacentor taiwanensis and
Haemaphysalis flava ticks were
R. japonica isolates. In
Ixodes ovatus,
Ixodes persulcatus,
and
Ixodes monospinosus, we identified a
Rickettsia identical
or closely related to
Rickettsia helvetica, a species that is
pathogenic for humans and that to date has only been found in
Europe. Finally, we identified a new genotype of unknown pathogenicity,
genotype AT, that was isolated from
Amblyomma testudinarium ticks and that is closely related to a Slovakian genotype obtained
from
Ixodes ricinus ticks.

INTRODUCTION
Rickettsioses are emerging infectious diseases caused by rickettsiae,
which are obligate intracellular gram-negative bacteria associated
with arthropod parasites. These arthropod vectors (ticks, fleas,
mites, and insects) can transmit rickettsiae to mammals and
humans. The rickettsioses share characteristic clinical features,
including fever, headache, rash, and sometimes eschar (tache
noire) formation at the site of the tick bite. The number of
representatives of the genus
Rickettsia and the number of newly
described rickettsioses have increased in recent decades as
a result of the development of an improved cell culture isolation
technique and the extensive use of bacterial detection and identification
based on molecular biology techniques (
14). Comparison of the
sequences of PCR-amplified fragments of the genes encoding 16S
rRNA (ribosomal DNA [rDNA]) (
16), citrate synthase (
gltA) (
17),
or the rOmpA outer membrane protein (
ompA) has become a reliable
method for the identification of
Rickettsia spp. (
15).
The discovery of Japanese spotted fever by Mahara (9) in 1984 began the study of spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsioses in Japan. The causative agent was identified and named Rickettsia japonica (22). The bacterium was apparently detected in three genera and six species of ticks (9). This stimulated the search for rickettsiae in ticks (19); and since 1993, 63 strains have been isolated from six tick species: Amblyomma testudinarium (25 isolates) (5, 25), Dermacentor taiwanensis (1 isolate) (20, 24), Haemaphysalis flava (1 isolate) (6), Ixodes monospinosus (1 isolate) (4), Ixodes ovatus (33 isolates), and Ixodes persulcatus (2 isolates) (4). These isolates were tested by using two monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) and the immunoperoxidase reaction. One of the two MAbs, which had a broad spectrum of reactivity, reacted with all SFG rickettsiae, and the other MAb was specific for R. japonica (12). These isolates were also tested by PCR with primer sets derived from gltA, ompA, and ompB. The gltA gene was amplified from all strains, but the other two genes were amplified from only certain rickettsiae (Fig. 1). On the basis of the results of these tests, two new species were identified, the AT-type Rickettsia sp. (25 isolates from A. testudinarium; isolates AT-1 to AT-25) and the IO-type Rickettsia sp., including 33 isolates from I. ovatus (isolates IO-1 to IO-33) as well as the single isolate from I. monospinosus (isolate IM-1) and 2 isolates from I. persulcatus (isolates IP-1 and IP-2). Isolate DT-1, isolated from D. taiwanensis, and isolate FLA-1, isolated from H. flava, were considered R. japonica strains on the basis of MAb testing.
The purpose of the present work was to determine by PCR amplification
and sequencing of the 16S rDNA and
gltA genes the current positions
of six typical Japanese isolates (isolates AT-1, IO-1, DT-1,
IM-1, FLA-1, and IP-1) and estimate their potential roles as
human pathogens.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Strains AT-1, IO-1, DT-1, IM-1, FLA-1, and IP-1 were initially
cultivated in L929 cells (
4) (Table
1). They were subsequently
propagated in Vero cells as described previously (
8). Their
DNA was extracted with the QIAamp tissue kit (Qiagen, Hilden,
Germany) according to the instructions of the manufacturer.
PCR amplification and sequencing reactions were performed with
oligonucleotide primers derived from the 16S rDNA and
gltA genes
(Table
2). All primers were purchased form Eurobio (Les Ulis,
France), and amplifications were carried out in a Peltier model
PTC-200 DNA thermocycler (MJ Research, Inc., San Francisco,
Calif.) under previously described conditions (17). Each amplicon
obtained was purified for sequencing with a QIAquick Spin PCR
Purification kit (Qiagen, Courtaboeuf, France) by the protocol
described by the manufacturer. Sequencing reactions were carried
out with a
D-rhodamine terminator cycle DNA sequencing kit (Applied
Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.) as described by the manufacturer.
Sequencing reaction products were resolved by electrophoresis
with an ABI Prism 377 sequencer (Applied Bioystems). The results
obtained were processed into sequence data by using sequence
Navigator and AutoAssembler software. Each base position was
established at least three times in both the forward and the
reverse directions.
The sequences of the 16S rDNA and
gltA genes were aligned by
use of the multisequence alignment program CLUSTAL within the
BISANCE environment. Phylogenetic relationships between the
six strains and other SFG rickettsiae were inferred by using
version 3.4 of the PHYLIP software package (
2). The distance
matrices generated by DNADIST were determined under the assumptions
of Kimura (6a) and were used to infer dendrograms by the neighbor-joining
method. Dendrograms were also constructed by data processing
with the maximum-likelihood and parsimony programs in the PHYLIP
software package. A bootstrap analysis based on 100 randomly
generated trees by using SEQBOOT and CONSENSE in the PHYLIP
software package was performed to estimate the node reliabilities
of the trees obtained by three phylogenetic methods (
1).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The GenBank nucleotide sequence accession numbers for the 16S rDNA sequences of isolates DT-1, FLA-1, IP-1, IM-1, IO-1, and AT-1 are AF394902, AF394903, AF394904, AF394905, AF394906, and AY049981, respectively; the GenBank nucleotide sequence accession numbers for the gltA sequences of DT-1, FLA-1, IP-1, IM-1, IO-1, and AT-1 are AF394897, AF394898, AF394899, AF394900, AF394901, and AF394896, respectively.

RESULTS
For all six strains studied, the 16S rDNA sequence was 1,440
nucleotides long, whereas the
gltA sequence was 1,234 nucleotides
long in all strains except strain AT-1, which exhibited a 1,235-nucleotide
gltA sequence due to the insertion of an adenine at position
691. The sequences of the 16S rDNA and
gltA genes of IP-1 and
IM-1 exhibited 100% homology with those of
R. helvetica, whereas
the sequences of the 16S rDNA and
gltA genes of IO-1 differed
from those of
R. helvetica by 14 and 12 base substitutions,
respectively (Table
3). The sequences of the 16S rDNA and
gltA genes of FLA-1 were 100% homologous to those of
R. japonica,
but the sequences of the 16S rDNA and
gltA genes of DT-1 differed
from those of
R. japonica by three base substitutions for both
genes (Table
3). The sequence of the 16S rDNA gene of AT-1 differed
from those of isolates Slovakia 3 and Slovakia 4 (obtained from
Ixodes ricinus ticks) by 11 and 10 base substitutions, respectively,
and the sequence of the
gltA gene of AT-1 differed from those
of Slovakia 3 and Slovakia 4 by 11 and 13 base substitutions,
respectively (Table
3).
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TABLE 3. Nucleotide differences between the six Japanese rickettsial isolates and their closest relative speciesa
|
On the basis of analysis of the 16S rDNA and
gltA sequences,
IP-1, IM-1, and IO-1 clustered with
Rickettsia helvetica; and
this cluster was supported by a 100% bootstrap value. The cluster
made up of FLA-1, DT-1, and
R. japonica was also supported statistically.
AT-1 was reliably related to uncultivated isolates Slovakia
3 and Slovakia 4 from
I. ricinus ticks (
18). The phylogenetic
classifications of the other rickettsial species were similar
to those obtained previously (
17) (Fig.
2).

DISCUSSION
Only one spotted fever rickettsiosis, Japanese spotted fever,
caused by
R. japonica, has been described in Japan (
9). However,
since 1993, 63 rickettsial isolates, which have been classified
into six species on the basis of identical gene sequences or
reactivities to MAbs, have been cultivated from six tick species
(
4,
6,
20,
24,
25). In the work described here, we analyzed
one isolate from each of these six rickettsial species. We identified
isolates IP-1 and IM-1 as
R. helvetica strains, isolate IO-1
as being closely related to but different from
R. helvetica,
and isolates FLA-1 and DT-1 as
R. japonica strains. In addition,
we found that isolate AT-1 is a new genotype.
R. helvetica was first isolated in Switzerland from I. ricinus, the vector of Lyme disease in Europe. Later, it was found in France, Portugal, and Sweden. In this work, it was isolated from I. ovatus, the vector of Borrelia japonica in Japan. Thirty-three strains were isolated from I. ovatus ticks, two strains were isolated from I. persulcatus ticks, and one strain was isolated from an I. monospinosus tick; all of these strains belonged to the same serotype. At present, R. helvetica is present only in I. ricinus ticks in Europe, and our data show for the first time that the distribution of this bacterium is not limited to Europe but extends to Asia. As I. persulcatus, the vector of Lyme disease in Japan (21), belongs to the I. ricinus complex, one could expect the area of distribution of R. helvetica in Eurasia to be close to that of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato. In Europe, forest workers in areas where I. ricinus is prevalent have high seroprevalences of antibodies to R. helvetica (3). In Japan, I. persulcatus tick bites have been reported (7). Three patients reported similar fingernail-sized erythemas at the site of the tick bite. However, the role of R. helvetica in this manifestation was not been demonstrated. Recently, another Japanese patient developed similar symptoms following an I. persulcatus bite and seroconverted to positivity for antibodies to R. helvetica (H. Inokuma and D. Raoult, unpublished data). At present, the pathogenic role of R. helvetica has been demonstrated in two articles: in France, a man who had an isolated episode of fever and who had been exposed to I. ricinus seroconverted to positivity for antibodies to R. helvetica (3), and in Sweden, two patients with sudden death suffered perimyocarditis caused by R. helvetica, as determined by electron microscopy, PCR, and serology (11).
R. japonica is the agent of Japanese spotted fever. In the present work, we confirm that D. taiwanensis and H. flava harbor isolates of R. japonica. By using MAbs and PCR, this species was also identified in I. ovatus ticks, which is discrepant with our results. We believe that R. japonica may be present throughout the areas of distribution of D. taiwanensis (eastern China and Taiwan) and H. flava (Korea, China, and Taiwan). Very closely related organisms were reported in China (26) and were isolated from Dermacentor silvarum ticks (isolate 054, or "Rickettsia heilongjiangii") and Haemaphysalis concinna ticks (isolate HL-93, or "Rickettsia hulinii"). The spectrum of infected ticks is large, which is unusual for tick-transmitted rickettisae except R. rickettsii (14). It is also surprising that the geographical distribution of Japanese spotted fever is much more restricted than that of its vector tick. Usually, for SFG rickettsiae, ticks are both the reservoir and the vector of the bacteria (14) and the geographical distribution of the disease is superposed on that of the tick. The notable exception to this is R. conorii, which is absent in the Americas, despite the presence of Rhipicephalus sanguineus, its reservoir tick (13). As is the case for R. japonica, the lack of evidence of Japanese spotted fever outside southern Japan may be caused either by a lack of infection or by the absence of recording of the disease.
We identified a new genotype in a rickettsial organism isolated from A. testudinarium (isolate AT-1). This genotype is related to that for two rickettsiae previously identified in I. ricinus ticks collected in Slovakia only by PCR amplification and sequencing (18). A. testudinarium ticks frequently bite humans in Japan (9, 10) and could be a potent vector of rickettsial diseases. Recently, a case of pseudo-Lyme disease characterized by a skin lesion and local enlarged lymph nodes was observed in Belgium in a patient returning from Nepal. An A. testudinarium tick was found on the skin lesion (P. Van Gompel, unpublished data). However, the causative role of AT-1 in this patient remains to be demonstrated.
In conclusion, we confirmed that the rickettsiae isolated from D. taiwanensis and H. flava ticks were R. japonica strains, and thus, these tick species are potential vectors of Japanese spotted fever. We identified R. helvetica outside Europe for the first time and identified a new genotype of rickettsia in A. testudinarium ticks. As the vector ticks easily bite humans, these rickettsiae represent a potential threat in Japan. Because the ticks analyzed are also prevalent in other areas of Central and Eastern Asia, the distributions of these rickettsiae may well be much larger.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Marie-José Casagrande for helpful contributions.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Unité des Rickettsies, Faculté de Médecine, CNRS UMR 6020, Université de la Méditerranée, 27, Blvd. Jean Moulin, 13385 Marseille, Cedex 05, France. Phone: 33 4 91 32 43 75. Fax: 33 4 91 38 77 72. E-mail:
Didier.Raoult{at}medecine.univ-mrs.fr.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, June 2002, p. 2176-2181, Vol. 40, No. 6
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.6.2176-2181.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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