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1.
Int J Parasitol ; 44(12): 941-53, 2014 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25236960

ABSTRACT

Seventy species of ticks are known from Australia: 14 soft ticks (family Argasidae) and 56 hard ticks (family Ixodidae). Sixteen of the 70 ticks in Australia may feed on humans and domestic animals (Barker and Walker 2014). The other 54 species of ticks in Australia feed only on wild mammals, reptiles and birds. At least 12 of the species of ticks in Australian also occur in Papua New Guinea. We use an image-matching system much like the image-matching systems of field guides to birds and flowers to identify Ixodes holocyclus (paralysis tick), Ixodes cornuatus (southern paralysis tick) and Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) australis (Australian cattle tick). Our species accounts have reviews of the literature on I. holocyclus (paralysis tick) from the first paper on the biology of an Australian tick by Bancroft (1884), on paralysis of dogs by I. holocyclus, to papers published recently, and of I. cornuatus (southern paralysis tick) and Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) australis (Australian cattle tick). We comment on four controversial questions in the evolutionary biology of ticks: (i) were labyrinthodont amphibians in Australia in the Devonian the first hosts of soft, hard and nuttalliellid ticks?; (ii) are the nuttalliellid ticks the sister-group to the hard ticks or the soft ticks?; (iii) is Nuttalliella namaqua the missing link between the soft and hard ticks?; and (iv) the evidence for a lineage of large bodied parasitiform mites (ticks plus the holothyrid mites plus the opiliocarid mites).


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Ixodes/classification , Phylogeny , Rhipicephalus/classification , Ticks/classification , Animals , Animals, Domestic/parasitology , Australia , Humans , Ixodes/anatomy & histology , Ixodes/physiology , Ixodidae/classification , Ixodidae/parasitology , Papua New Guinea , Rhipicephalus/anatomy & histology , Rhipicephalus/physiology , Species Specificity , Ticks/anatomy & histology , Ticks/physiology
2.
Zootaxa ; (3816): 1-144, 2014 Jun 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24943801

ABSTRACT

The book Australian Ticks by F.H.S. Roberts (1970) is a land-mark in Australian tick biology. But it is time for a new and improved book on the ticks of Australia. The present book has identification guides and accounts of the biology and diseases associated with the 16 species of ticks that may feed on domestic animals and humans in Australia. These comprise five argasid (soft) ticks: Argas persicus (poultry tick), Argas robertsi (Robert's bird tick), Ornithodoros capensis (seabird soft tick), O. gurneyi (kangaroo soft tick), Otobius megnini (spinose ear tick); and 11 ixodid (hard) ticks, Amblyomma triguttatum (ornate kangaroo tick), Bothriocroton auruginans (wombat tick), B. hydrosauri (southern reptile tick), Haemaphysalis bancrofti (wallaby tick), H. longicornis (bush tick), Ixodes cornuatus (southern paralysis tick), I. hirsti (Hirst's marsupial tick), I. holocyclus (paralysis tick), I. tasmani (common marsupial tick), Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) australis (Australian cattle tick) and R. sanguineus (brown dog tick).  We use an image-matching system to identify ticks, much like the image-matching systems used in field-guides for birds and flowers. Ticks may be identified by drawings that emphasise unique matrices of uniformly defined morphological characters that, together, allow these 16 ticks to be identified by morphology unequivocally. The species accounts have seven sections: (i) General; (ii)  Differential diagnosis; (iii) Hosts; (iv) Life-cycle and seasonality; (v) Disease; (vi) Habitat and geographic distribution; (vii) Genes and genomes; and (viii) Other information. There are 71 figures and tables, including a glossary character matrices, drawings of life-cycles, drawings of genera, species, and colour photographs of tick biology.


Subject(s)
Animals, Domestic , Tick Infestations/parasitology , Tick Infestations/veterinary , Ticks/classification , Ticks/physiology , Animals , Australia , Demography , Female , Genome , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Male , Reproduction , Species Specificity , Tick Infestations/epidemiology , Ticks/anatomy & histology , Ticks/genetics
3.
Parasitology ; 138(8): 945-59, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21733257

ABSTRACT

Comparisons of successful and failed attempts to eradicate livestock ticks reveal that the social context of farming and management of the campaigns have greater influence than techniques of treatment. The biology of ticks is considered principally where it has contributed to control of ticks as practiced on farms. The timing of treatments by life cycle and season can be exploited to reduce numbers of treatments per year. Pastures can be managed to starve and desiccate vulnerable larvae questing on vegetation. Immunity to ticks acquired by hosts can be enhanced by livestock breeding. The aggregated distribution of ticks on hosts with poor immunity can be used to select animals for removal from the herd. Models of tick population dynamics required for predicting outcomes of control methods need better understanding of drivers of distribution, aggregation, stability, and density-dependent mortality. Changing social circumstances, especially of land-use, has an influence on exposure to tick-borne pathogens that can be exploited for disease control.


Subject(s)
Arachnid Vectors/physiology , Livestock/parasitology , Tick Control/methods , Tick Infestations/veterinary , Ticks/physiology , Animals , Arachnid Vectors/anatomy & histology , Arachnid Vectors/classification , Tick Infestations/economics , Tick Infestations/parasitology , Tick Infestations/prevention & control , Ticks/anatomy & histology , Ticks/classification
4.
Infect Immun ; 75(10): 4909-16, 2007 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17635866

ABSTRACT

We examined the influence of host immunity on the genotypic diversity of the intracellular transforming cattle parasite Theileria parva. By tracking the emergence of discrete parasite genotypes in an animal challenged with a bulk stabilate following immunization with its major component clone, we observed a profound modulation of genotypic frequencies in the breakthrough schizont population. In particular, no incidences of the immunizing clone were observed and a progressive decline was apparent in the relatedness of breakthrough genotypes to it. These observations were reflected in the genotypic profile of transmissible parasite stages that emerged in the erythrocyte fraction of the animal and in parasite progeny generated by tick pickup. In a separate experiment, genotypic profiles of breakthrough parasite populations were observed to vary between unrelated immune animals selected on the basis of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I phenotype, a known determinant of the specificity of the immune response. Furthermore, immunization and challenge of calves with molecularly distinct but cross-protective parasite populations revealed that infection results in transmissible erythrocyte forms in spite of a protective immune response. These observations suggest that immunity does not prevent transmission of challenge parasites and that its impact on the parasite at a population level is influenced by herd MHC diversity.


Subject(s)
Genetic Variation , Selection, Genetic , Theileria parva/genetics , Theileria parva/immunology , Theileriasis/immunology , Theileriasis/parasitology , Animals , Cattle , Cluster Analysis , Genotype , Theileriasis/transmission
6.
Infect Immun ; 74(10): 5456-64, 2006 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16988220

ABSTRACT

We evaluated sexual recombination in the apicomplexan parasite Theileria parva using genome-wide marker analysis of haploid sporozoite populations obtained from infected Rhipicephalus appendiculatus ticks. Analysis of 231 parasite clones derived by in vitro infection of bovine lymphocytes revealed 48 distinct combinations of 64 polymorphic marker loci. One genotype accounted for more than 75% of the clones, and the population was highly inbred with respect to this. The occurrence of frequent recombination was evident from reassortment of contiguous markers in blocks, with some recombination occurring within blocks. Analysis of four polymorphic loci encoding antigens targeted by protective cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte responses confirmed that these loci reassort, both within and between chromosomes, suggesting that recombination may influence immune recognition. Marker analysis of a panel of 142 clones derived from the population after an additional passage through a calf and the same tick colony revealed 18 genotypes, with the original dominant genotype accounting for 75% of the population and a higher level of inbreeding with respect to it in the remaining clones. Selected marker analysis of genomic DNA from these stabilates and the two preceding generations of the isolate, each derived from distinct tick colonies, revealed shifts in population structure with each generation, suggesting that the tick vector may impose nonrandom selective pressure on the parasite.


Subject(s)
Polymorphism, Genetic , Recombination, Genetic , Rhipicephalus/parasitology , Theileria parva/genetics , Animals , Cattle , Genome, Protozoan , Genomics , Genotype , T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic/parasitology , Theileria parva/isolation & purification
7.
Science ; 309(5731): 131-3, 2005 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15994557

ABSTRACT

Theileria annulata and T. parva are closely related protozoan parasites that cause lymphoproliferative diseases of cattle. We sequenced the genome of T. annulata and compared it with that of T. parva to understand the mechanisms underlying transformation and tropism. Despite high conservation of gene sequences and synteny, the analysis reveals unequally expanded gene families and species-specific genes. We also identify divergent families of putative secreted polypeptides that may reduce immune recognition, candidate regulators of host-cell transformation, and a Theileria-specific protein domain [frequently associated in Theileria (FAINT)] present in a large number of secreted proteins.


Subject(s)
Genome, Protozoan , Protozoan Proteins/genetics , Theileria annulata/genetics , Theileria parva/genetics , Amino Acid Motifs , Animals , Cattle , Cell Proliferation , Chromosome Mapping , Chromosomes/genetics , Conserved Sequence , Genes, Protozoan , Life Cycle Stages , Lipid Metabolism , Lymphocytes/cytology , Lymphocytes/parasitology , Molecular Sequence Data , Multigene Family , Phylogeny , Protein Sorting Signals/genetics , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Proteome , Protozoan Proteins/chemistry , Protozoan Proteins/physiology , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Species Specificity , Synteny , Telomere/genetics , Theileria annulata/growth & development , Theileria annulata/immunology , Theileria annulata/pathogenicity , Theileria parva/growth & development , Theileria parva/immunology , Theileria parva/pathogenicity
8.
Clin Diagn Lab Immunol ; 10(5): 917-25, 2003 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12965927

ABSTRACT

Two serological tests for detection of antibodies to Ehrlichia (previously Cowdria) ruminantium, the causative agent of heartwater, were compared by using field sera collected from sheep and cattle as part of serosurveys in Ghana. Sera selected as either negative or positive by a new polyclonal competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (PC-ELISA) were tested by the indirect MAP1-B ELISA. Cutoff values of 14 percent positivity (14 PP) for both ruminant species were obtained for the MAP1-B ELISA by using preseroconversion Ghanaian sera and were compared with previously recommended cutoff values of 29 PP for sheep and 38 PP for cattle. With the 14-PP cutoff, of 151 sheep sera which tested negative by PC-ELISA, 89% were also negative by MAP1-B ELISA, while of 419 sheep sera positive by PC-ELISA, 98% were also positive by MAP1-B ELISA. Of 261 bovine sera negative by PC-ELISA, 82% were also negative by MAP1-B ELISA. Of 511 bovine sera positive by PC-ELISA, only 47% were positive by MAP1-B ELISA; these included 168 sera collected from cattle following first seroconversion as detected by both tests, with 125 of these sera positive by PC-ELISA but only 59 and 5 positive by MAP1-B ELISA with the 14- and 38-PP cutoff levels, respectively. These results indicate that both assays are highly sensitive and specific for detection of E. ruminantium exposure in sheep but that the MAP1-B ELISA lacks sensitivity for postseroconversion bovine sera in comparison to the PC-ELISA. Both tests confirm E. ruminantium seroprevalence of at least 70% in Ghanaian sheep; levels of exposure among Amblyomma variegatum-infested Ghanaian cattle are likely to be higher than the seroprevalence value of 66% obtained with the PC-ELISA.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Bacterial/blood , Ehrlichia ruminantium/immunology , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Heartwater Disease/blood , Animals , Cattle , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay/methods , Ghana , Heartwater Disease/epidemiology , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity , Seroepidemiologic Studies , Sheep
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