Emerging Infectious Diseases (Apr 2011)

Molecular Epidemiology of Coxiella burnetii from Ruminants in Q Fever Outbreak, the Netherlands

  • Hendrik I.J. Roest,
  • Robin C. Ruuls,
  • Jeroen J.H.C. Tilburg,
  • Marrigje H. Nabuurs-Franssen,
  • Corné H.W. Klaassen,
  • Piet Vellema,
  • René van den Brom,
  • Daan Dercksen,
  • Willem Wouda,
  • Marcel A.H. Spierenburg,
  • Arco N. van der Spek,
  • Rob Buijs,
  • Albert G. de Boer,
  • Peter Th.J. Willemsen,
  • Fred G. van Zijderveld

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1704.101562
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 4
pp. 668 – 675

Abstract

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Q fever is a zoonosis caused by the bacterium Coxiella burnetii. One of the largest reported outbreaks of Q fever in humans occurred in the Netherlands starting in 2007; epidemiologic investigations identified small ruminants as the source. To determine the genetic background of C. burnetii in domestic ruminants responsible for the human Q fever outbreak, we genotyped 126 C. burnetii–positive samples from ruminants by using a 10-loci multilocus variable-number tandem-repeat analyses panel and compared them with internationally known genotypes. One unique genotype predominated in dairy goat herds and 1 sheep herd in the human Q fever outbreak area in the south of the Netherlands. On the basis of 4 loci, this genotype is similar to a human genotype from the Netherlands. This finding strengthens the probability that this genotype of C. burnetii is responsible for the human Q fever epidemic in the Netherlands.

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