Molecular Evidence for Vector Implication of Onchocerca lupi in Los Angeles County, CA

Onchocerca is a genus of roundworm most commonly associated with the human infection onchocerciasis, or river blindness. While typically a zoonotic infection of ungulate populations, canine cases (Onchocerca lupi) have been identified in the United States and Greece. In 2012, Los Angeles County, Vet...

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Main Author: Bolcen, Shanna June
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/4988
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6184&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-61842019-10-04T05:18:43Z Molecular Evidence for Vector Implication of Onchocerca lupi in Los Angeles County, CA Bolcen, Shanna June Onchocerca is a genus of roundworm most commonly associated with the human infection onchocerciasis, or river blindness. While typically a zoonotic infection of ungulate populations, canine cases (Onchocerca lupi) have been identified in the United States and Greece. In 2012, Los Angeles County, Veterinary Public Health Program identified 3 cases of Onchocerca spp. infections in domestic canines. Samples from the ensuing blackfly collections were sent to the Global Health Infectious Disease Research Unnasch Laboratory for parasite isolation and vector species identification. Species-specific primers were designed and optimized for O. lupi using a non- specific cytochrome oxidase (COI) gene target (689bp) previously utilized in Onchocerca identification as a base. A secondary, nested PCR primer set (115bp) was additionally designed to aid in the screening process. Extracted DNA samples from the collected blackflies were screened for the presence of the parasite and positive samples were further tested against the larger fragment for confirmation. The primers designed for the study were determined to be specific to O. lupi and not cross-reactive with other Onchocerca species or Dirofilaria immitis. Of the 213 blackflies screened, 6 samples tested positive for parasite presence. The blackfly species was identified as Simulium spp. The presence of the O. lupi parasite in the black fly population implicates that this is the likely vector in the LA County cases. While the blackfly identification was unable to be determined to the species level, the identification of Simulium spp. confirms the typically suspected vector in Onchocerca infections. Concerns of cross-species transmission make O. lupi an important parasite for public health study. 2014-03-27T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/4988 https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6184&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons Canine Ocular lesions PCR Design Simulium species Molecular Biology Parasitology Public Health
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Canine
Ocular lesions
PCR Design
Simulium species
Molecular Biology
Parasitology
Public Health
spellingShingle Canine
Ocular lesions
PCR Design
Simulium species
Molecular Biology
Parasitology
Public Health
Bolcen, Shanna June
Molecular Evidence for Vector Implication of Onchocerca lupi in Los Angeles County, CA
description Onchocerca is a genus of roundworm most commonly associated with the human infection onchocerciasis, or river blindness. While typically a zoonotic infection of ungulate populations, canine cases (Onchocerca lupi) have been identified in the United States and Greece. In 2012, Los Angeles County, Veterinary Public Health Program identified 3 cases of Onchocerca spp. infections in domestic canines. Samples from the ensuing blackfly collections were sent to the Global Health Infectious Disease Research Unnasch Laboratory for parasite isolation and vector species identification. Species-specific primers were designed and optimized for O. lupi using a non- specific cytochrome oxidase (COI) gene target (689bp) previously utilized in Onchocerca identification as a base. A secondary, nested PCR primer set (115bp) was additionally designed to aid in the screening process. Extracted DNA samples from the collected blackflies were screened for the presence of the parasite and positive samples were further tested against the larger fragment for confirmation. The primers designed for the study were determined to be specific to O. lupi and not cross-reactive with other Onchocerca species or Dirofilaria immitis. Of the 213 blackflies screened, 6 samples tested positive for parasite presence. The blackfly species was identified as Simulium spp. The presence of the O. lupi parasite in the black fly population implicates that this is the likely vector in the LA County cases. While the blackfly identification was unable to be determined to the species level, the identification of Simulium spp. confirms the typically suspected vector in Onchocerca infections. Concerns of cross-species transmission make O. lupi an important parasite for public health study.
author Bolcen, Shanna June
author_facet Bolcen, Shanna June
author_sort Bolcen, Shanna June
title Molecular Evidence for Vector Implication of Onchocerca lupi in Los Angeles County, CA
title_short Molecular Evidence for Vector Implication of Onchocerca lupi in Los Angeles County, CA
title_full Molecular Evidence for Vector Implication of Onchocerca lupi in Los Angeles County, CA
title_fullStr Molecular Evidence for Vector Implication of Onchocerca lupi in Los Angeles County, CA
title_full_unstemmed Molecular Evidence for Vector Implication of Onchocerca lupi in Los Angeles County, CA
title_sort molecular evidence for vector implication of onchocerca lupi in los angeles county, ca
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2014
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/4988
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6184&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT bolcenshannajune molecularevidenceforvectorimplicationofonchocercalupiinlosangelescountyca
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