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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 03 1996, 671-674, Vol 34, No. 3
JA Higgins, S Radulovic, ME Schriefer and AF Azad
A flea-borne rickettsia, previously referred to as ELB, has been implicated
as a cause of human illness. Using sequence data obtained from a fragment
of the citrate synthase gene, we compared ELB, Rickettsia australis, R.
rickettsii, and R. akari with the louse-borne R. prowazekii. We tallied 24
base pair differences between ELB and R. prowazekii and 25 between R.
rickettsii and R. prowazekii; there were 30 base pair differences between
R. australis and R. prowazekii and 29 between R. akari and R. prowazekii.
We observed 32 differences between Rickettsia typhi and ELB. Sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblot analyses of ELB,
with typing sera against R. typhi indicate that ELB surface antigens are
more closely related to the flea-borne R. typhi than to the mite-borne R.
akari. On the basis of the results of citrate synthase gene sequence
comparisons, as well as previous comparisons with 16S rRNA and
17-kDa-protein gene segments, we found that ELB is sufficiently genetically
distinct from other rickettsiae to be designated a new species, Rickettsia
felis.
Copyright © 1996 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Rickettsia felis: a new species of pathogenic rickettsia isolated from cat fleas
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Maryland Medical School, Baltimore 21201, USA.
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