Publication | Open Access
Molecular Detection and Characterization of Cytauxzoon felis and a Babesia Species in Cougars from Florida
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Citations
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References
2006
Year
Animal TaxonomyGeneticsMolecular DetectionZoological TaxonomyPhylogenetic AnalysisPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyBabesia SpBabesia SpeciesParasitologyBiodiversityCytauxzoon FelisGenetic VariationPhylogenomicsBabesia Sp.BiologyNatural SciencesZoonotic DiseaseEvolutionary BiologyFlorida PanthersWildlife BiologyMedicineAnimal Virus
Piroplasms, morphologically indistinguishable from Cytauxzoon felis, previously were detected in 36% of cougars in Florida. We utilized a nested 18S rRNA assay, which amplifies DNA from all piroplasms, to screen blood samples collected from 41 cougars from Florida (39 native Florida panthers [Puma concolor coryi] and two translocated Texas cougars [P. c. stanleyana]) from 1989-2005. Thirty-nine of the 41 cougars (95%) were positive for piroplasms; however, sequence analysis and restriction enzyme digestion revealed that only five were positive for C. felis. Samples from 32 cougars were positive for a Babesia sp. Two cougars were co-infected with both C. felis and the Babesia sp. Phylogenetic analysis of 18S rRNA gene sequence indicated that the Florida panther Babesia sp. was most closely related to a Babesia sp. reported from Ixodes ovatus from Japan, Babesia divergens, and Babesia odocoilei. This study indicates that Florida panthers harbor two distinct piroplasms, C. felis and a Babesia sp., and that some individuals are infected with both organisms. The infectivity and pathogenicity of this Babesia sp. for domestic cats is unknown. This represents the first report of a feline Babesia sp. in North America.
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