Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine (Dec 2015)

Serological and molecular evidence of [i]Coxiella burnetii[/i] in samples from humans and animals in China

  • Heba S. El-Mahallawy,
  • Patrick Kelly,
  • Jilei Zhang,
  • Yi Yang,
  • Lanjing Wei,
  • Lili Tian,
  • Weixing Fan,
  • Zhenwen Zhang,
  • Chengming Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5604/12321966.1196859
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 87 – 91

Abstract

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[b]Introduction.[/b] [i]Coxiella burnetii[/i] is the agent of Q fever, a worldwide zoonosis. To add to the available knowledge of the disease in China, [i]C. burnetti[/i] infections were investigated in convenience samples from five animal species and humans from Yangzhou, Jiangsu province, eastern China. [b]Materials and methods.[/b] Commercial ELISA kits were used to detect antibodies to phase I and II [i]C. burnetii[/i]. A FRET-qPCR targeting the outer membrane protein com1 gene was also developed to detect [i]C. burnetii[/i] DNA in blood samples from animals and humans, and bovine milk samples. [b]Results.[/b] Seropositive cattle (44/150; 29%), goats (33/150; 22%), humans (45/180; 25%) and pigs (4/130; 3%) were found, while dogs (0/136; 0%) and cats (0/140; 0%) were seronegative. Seropositivity in humans was associated with increasing age, but there was no gender difference. DNA was amplified from two milk samples (2/150, 1.3%), while none of the blood samples were positive. The sequences of the obtained amplicons were identical to those of the com1 gene of the universal [i]C. burnetii[/i] RSA 493 strain and other stains from China. [b]Conclusions. [/b]The findings indicaten that C. burnetii is endemic in Yangzhou, China, and therefore human and animal health workers should be aware of the possibility of infections and the occurrence of outbreaks of Q fever.

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