7 research outputs found
Conservation and variation in the region of the Theileria parva p104 antigen coding gene used for PCR surveillance of the parasite
The range of the protozoan parasite Theileria parva, which causes East Coast fever in cattle, has been expanding to countries where it has not previously been detected, as a result of cross-border domestic cattle movement. Countries where T. parva has not previously been observed until recently include Cameroon and South Sudan. This raises the issue of the conservation of the p104 antigen gene, on which the nested PCR assay that is widely used for T. parva surveillance in the blood of infected cattle is based. We sampled 40 isolates from six countries widely distributed across the geographical range of the parasite, including eastern, central and southern Africa, for p104 sequence polymorphism. These included parasites from both domestic cattle and the Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer) wildlife reservoir. The most frequent allelic variants were present in cattle transmissible isolates from multiple widely separated geographical regions in Zambia, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda and South Africa. These frequent p104 variants were also present in the three component stocks of the Muguga cocktail used for the infection and treatment live immunisation procedure to control T. parva in the field. Other isolates exhibited unique alleles. This includes some of the p104 sequences from Cameroon, which is outside the known range of the Rhipicephalus tick vector and whose origin is therefore unclear. The nested primer oligonucleotides used to generate the amplicons were universally conserved in cattle-derived parasites and a majority of buffalo-derived isolates across the geographical range of the parasite. However, some rare South African buffaloâderived isolates exhibited one or two mismatches with the primer sequences. It therefore remains possible that some p104 alleles may be so divergent that they do not amplify with the current diagnostic primers and are not detectable in surveys, hence the need for increasing knowledge of genetic heterogeneity of diagnostic targets. There was no evidence for positive selection among those p104 mutations that resulted in residue changes. Importantly, the data indicate that the p104-based PCR detection assay should be effective across the majority of the range of T. parva, and if the one or two mismatches are shown in future to result in the primers annealing less efficiently, then the assay can be further improved by introduction of degenerate bases to enable amplification of the less frequent South African buffaloâderived variant p104 genes
Unique Mitochondrial Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms Demonstrate Resolution Potential to Discriminate Theileria parva Vaccine and Buffalo-Derived Strains
Distinct pathogenic and epidemiological features underlie different Theileria parva strains resulting in different clinical manifestations of East Coast Fever and Corridor Disease in susceptible cattle. Unclear delineation of these strains limits the control of these diseases in endemic areas. Hence, an accurate characterization of strains can improve the treatment and prevention approaches as well as investigate their origin. Here, we describe a set of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) based on 13 near-complete mitogenomes of T. parva strains originating from East and Southern Africa, including the live vaccine stock strains. We identified 11 SNPs that are non-preferentially distributed within the coding and non-coding regions, all of which are synonymous except for two within the cytochrome b gene of buffalo-derived strains. Our analysis ascertains haplotype-specific mutations that segregate the different vaccine and the buffalo-derived strains except T. parva-Muguga and Serengeti-transformed strains suggesting a shared lineage between the latter two vaccine strains. Phylogenetic analyses including the mitogenomes of other Theileria species: T. annulata, T. taurotragi, and T. lestoquardi, with the latter two sequenced in this study for the first time, were congruent with nuclear-encoded genes. Importantly, we describe seven T. parva haplotypes characterized by synonymous SNPs and parsimony-informative characters with the other three transforming species mitogenomes. We anticipate that tracking T. parva mitochondrial haplotypes from this study will provide insight into the parasiteâs epidemiological dynamics and underpin current control efforts
Sequence polymorphisms in a Theileria annulata surface protein (TaSP) known to augment the immunity induced by live attenuated cell line vaccine
Theileria annulata is a tickâborne protozoan causing tropical theileriosis in cattle. The use of attenuated cell line vaccines in combination with subunit vaccines has been relatively successful as a control method, as exemplified by a recent study in which immunization with a local cell line followed by booster vaccinations with recombinant T. annulata surface protein (TaSP) resulted in 100% protection upon field challenge in Sudan. However, these findings cannot be directly extrapolated to other countries as cultureâattenuated live vaccines are generated using local strains and no systematic evaluation of genotype differences between countries has been undertaken. In this study, we sequenced the TaSP gene from T. annulata cell lines and field isolates from Tunisia (n = 28) and compared them to genotypes from Sudan (n = 25) and Morocco (n = 1; AJ316259.1). Our analyses revealed 20 unique TaSP genotypes in the Tunisian samples, which were all novel but similar to genotypes found in Asia. The impact of these polymorphisms on the ability of the TaSP antigen to boost the immunity engendered by live cell line vaccines, especially in Tunisia where studies with TaSP have not been conducted, remains to be examined. Interestingly, phylogenetic analyses of publicly available TaSP sequences resolved the sequences into two clusters with no correlation to the geographical origin of the isolates. The availability of candidate vaccines that were recently attenuated using local strains from Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt and Morocco should be exploited to generate a comprehensive catalogue of genetic variation across this regional collection of attenuated live vaccines
Conservation and variation in the region of the Theileria parva p104 antigen coding gene used for PCR surveillance of the parasite
DATA AVAILABILITY : The p104 sequences generated from this study
are deposited in NCBI database under accession numbers:
MZ798149âMZ798158.The range of the protozoan parasite Theileria parva, which causes East Coast fever in cattle, has been expanding to countries
where it has not previously been detected, as a result of cross-border domestic cattle movement. Countries where T. parva has
not previously been observed until recently include Cameroon and South Sudan. This raises the issue of the conservation of
the p104 antigen gene, on which the nested PCR assay that is widely used for T. parva surveillance in the blood of infected
cattle is based. We sampled 40 isolates from six countries widely distributed across the geographical range of the parasite,
including eastern, central and southern Africa, for p104 sequence polymorphism. These included parasites from both domestic
cattle and the Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer) wildlife reservoir. The most frequent allelic variants were present in cattle
transmissible isolates from multiple widely separated geographical regions in Zambia, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda
and South Africa. These frequent p104 variants were also present in the three component stocks of the Muguga cocktail used
for the infection and treatment live immunisation procedure to control T. parva in the field. Other isolates exhibited unique
alleles. This includes some of the p104 sequences from Cameroon, which is outside the known range of the Rhipicephalus
tick vector and whose origin is therefore unclear. The nested primer oligonucleotides used to generate the amplicons were
universally conserved in cattle-derived parasites and a majority of buffalo-derived isolates across the geographical range of
the parasite. However, some rare South African buffaloâderived isolates exhibited one or two mismatches with the primer
sequences. It therefore remains possible that some p104 alleles may be so divergent that they do not amplify with the current
diagnostic primers and are not detectable in surveys, hence the need for increasing knowledge of genetic heterogeneity of
diagnostic targets. There was no evidence for positive selection among those p104 mutations that resulted in residue changes.
Importantly, the data indicate that the p104-based PCR detection assay should be effective across the majority of the range
of T. parva, and if the one or two mismatches are shown in future to result in the primers annealing less efficiently, then the
assay can be further improved by introduction of degenerate bases to enable amplification of the less frequent South African
buffaloâderived variant p104 genes.The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG), the Kenyan government (National Research FundâNRF) and the Germany Academic Exchange Service (DAAD). Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.http://link.springer.com/journal/436am2024Veterinary Tropical DiseasesSDG-03:Good heatlh and well-beingSDG-15:Life on lan
Unique Mitochondrial Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms Demonstrate Resolution Potential to Discriminate Theileria parva Vaccine and Buffalo-Derived Strains
Distinct pathogenic and epidemiological features underlie different Theileria parva strains resulting in different clinical manifestations of East Coast Fever and Corridor Disease in susceptible cattle. Unclear delineation of these strains limits the control of these diseases in endemic areas. Hence, an accurate characterization of strains can improve the treatment and prevention approaches as well as investigate their origin. Here, we describe a set of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) based on 13 near-complete mitogenomes of T. parva strains originating from East and Southern Africa, including the live vaccine stock strains. We identified 11 SNPs that are non-preferentially distributed within the coding and non-coding regions, all of which are synonymous except for two within the cytochrome b gene of buffalo-derived strains. Our analysis ascertains haplotype-specific mutations that segregate the different vaccine and the buffalo-derived strains except T. parva-Muguga and Serengeti-transformed strains suggesting a shared lineage between the latter two vaccine strains. Phylogenetic analyses including the mitogenomes of other Theileria species: T. annulata, T. taurotragi, and T. lestoquardi, with the latter two sequenced in this study for the first time, were congruent with nuclear-encoded genes. Importantly, we describe seven T. parva haplotypes characterized by synonymous SNPs and parsimony-informative characters with the other three transforming species mitogenomes. We anticipate that tracking T. parva mitochondrial haplotypes from this study will provide insight into the parasite’s epidemiological dynamics and underpin current control efforts
Unique mitochondrial single nucleotide polymorphisms demonstrate resolution potential to discriminate Theileria parva vaccine and buffalo-derived strains
Distinct pathogenic and epidemiological features underlie different Theileria parva
strains resulting in different clinical manifestations of East Coast Fever and Corridor Disease
in susceptible cattle. Unclear delineation of these strains limits the control of these diseases in
endemic areas. Hence, an accurate characterization of strains can improve the treatment and
prevention approaches as well as investigate their origin. Here, we describe a set of single nucleotide
polymorphisms (SNPs) based on 13 near-complete mitogenomes of T. parva strains originating
from East and Southern Africa, including the live vaccine stock strains. We identified 11 SNPs
that are non-preferentially distributed within the coding and non-coding regions, all of which are
synonymous except for two within the cytochrome b gene of buffalo-derived strains. Our analysis
ascertains haplotype-specific mutations that segregate the different vaccine and the buffalo-derived
strains except T. parva-Muguga and Serengeti-transformed strains suggesting a shared lineage
between the latter two vaccine strains. Phylogenetic analyses including the mitogenomes of other
Theileria species: T. annulata, T. taurotragi, and T. lestoquardi, with the latter two sequenced in this
study for the first time, were congruent with nuclear-encoded genes. Importantly, we describe seven
T. parva haplotypes characterized by synonymous SNPs and parsimony-informative characters with
the other three transforming species mitogenomes. We anticipate that tracking T. parva mitochondrial
haplotypes from this study will provide insight into the parasiteâs epidemiological dynamics and
underpin current control efforts.Table S1: Amplification and sequencing primer sequences, Table S2: Summary of NGS reads (SRA accession
number: DRA000613) mapped to T. parva Muguga-mitochondrial sequence (AB499089).The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG); the Kenyan government through the National Research Fund (NRF) and the Germany Academic Exchange Service (DAAD); the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) under project number 01KI1720 as part of the âResearch Network Zoonotic Infectious Diseasesâ.
Open Access funding provided by the Freie UniversitÀt Berlin.http://www.mdpi.com/journal/lifeam2021Veterinary Tropical Disease
Variant analysis of the sporozoite surface antigen gene reveals that asymptomatic cattle from wildlife-livestock interface areas in northern Tanzania harbour buffalo-derived T. parva
Buffalo-derived Theileria parva can âbreak throughâ the immunity induced by the infection and treatment vaccination method (ITM) in cattle. However, no such âbreakthroughsâ have been reported in northern Tanzania where there has been long and widespread ITM use in pastoralist cattle, and the Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer) is also present. We studied the exposure of vaccinated and unvaccinated cattle in northern Tanzania to buffalo-derived T. parva using p67 gene polymorphisms and compared this to its distribution in vaccinated cattle exposed to buffalo-derived T. parva in central Kenya, where vaccine âbreakthroughsâ have been reported. Additionally, we analysed the CD8+ T cell target antigen Tp2 for positive selection. Our results showed that 10% of the p67 sequences from Tanzanian cattle (n = 39) had a buffalo type p67 (allele 4), an allele that is rare among East African isolates studied so far. The percentage of buffalo-derived p67 alleles observed in Kenyan cattle comprised 19% of the parasites (n = 36), with two different p67 alleles (2 and 3) of presumptive buffalo origin. The Tp2 protein was generally conserved with only three Tp2 variants from Tanzania (n = 33) and five from Kenya (n = 40). Two Tanzanian Tp2 variants and two Kenyan Tp2 variants were identical to variants present in the trivalent Muguga vaccine. Tp2 evolutionary analysis did not show evidence for positive selection within previously mapped epitope coding sites. The p67 data indicates that some ITM-vaccinated cattle are protected against disease induced by a buffalo-derived T. parva challenge in northern Tanzania and suggests that the parasite genotype may represent one factor explaining this