5 research outputs found
Seroepidemiology and molecular diversity of Leishmania donovani complex in Georgia
Background
Leishmaniasis includes multiple clinical syndromes, most notably visceral, cutaneous, and mucosal forms. Visceral leishmaniasis (VL), also known as kala-azar, is a potentially fatal disease endemic to large parts of Africa and Asia, and in South-Eastern Europe (Greece, Turkey, Georgia). Visceral leishmaniasis is a parasitic zoonosis caused by species of the L. donovani complex. In the classical epidemiological model the main reservoir for VL are canines.
Methods
The study included a cohort of 513 individuals of both genders (190 males and 323 females) from the ages of 1 to 70 years that were screened in ten villages across two districts in Kakheti using the Kalazar Detect™ rK39 rapid diagnostic test. The phylogenetic diversity patterns of local strains, based on the rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences, were assessed for samples obtained from patients with suspected L. donovani infection, from canine reservoirs and from Phlebotomus sand flies obtained from different geographical areas of Georgia and from Azerbaijan.
Results
Out of a total of 600 domestic dog blood samples 95 (15.8 %) were positive by rK39 rapid diagnostic tests. For symptomatic domestic dogs, the testing of conjunctival swabs or bone marrow aspirates revealed a higher VL incidence in Kvareli District (Kvareli; 19.4 %, n = 329) compared with that observed for Sagarejo District (Sagarejo; 11.4 %, n = 271). A total of 231 sand flies of both genders were collected during the 2-month period; of the 114 females, 1.75 % were PCR positive for the presence of Leishmania spp.
Conclusions
VL infection rates remain high in both canines and humans in Georgia, with disease in several known natural foci. The genetic relationships derived from rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequence comparisons identified genetic subgroups, revealing preliminary insights into the genetic structure of L. donovani complex members currently circulating in the South Caucasus and demonstrates the utility of ITS-based genotyping in the resource-limited country of Georgia
Additional file 2: Figure S2. of Seroepidemiology and molecular diversity of Leishmania donovani complex in Georgia
Partial alignment illustration of major regions of ITS1/2 sequence diversity. (PDF 118 kb
Additional file 3: of Seroepidemiology and molecular diversity of Leishmania donovani complex in Georgia
Full alignment. FASTA file of concatenated L. donovani complex ITS sequences included in this study. (FASTA 76 kb
Additional file 1: Figure S1. of Seroepidemiology and molecular diversity of Leishmania donovani complex in Georgia
Consensus maximum likelihood (ML) dendogram inferred from concatenated L. donovani complex rDNA ITS sequences under the JC best-fit model. (PDF 49 kb