Quantitative competitive PCR as a technique for exploring flea -: Yersina pestis dynamics

被引:59
作者
Engelthaler, DM
Hinnebusch, BJ
Rittner, CM
Gage, KL
机构
[1] NIAID, Rocky Mt Labs, Microbial Struct & Funct Lab, NIH, Hamilton, MT 59840 USA
[2] Arizona Dept Hlth Serv, Bur Epidemiol & Dis Control Serv, Phoenix, AZ 85015 USA
[3] Ctr Dis Control, Bacterial Zoonoses Branch, Div Vector Borne Infect Dis, Natl Ctr Infect Dis, Ft Collins, CO 80522 USA
关键词
D O I
10.4269/ajtmh.2000.62.552
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
We used a quantitative competitive polymerase chain reaction assay to quantify Yersinia pestis loads in fleas and bacteremia levels in mice that were used as sources of infectious blood meals for feeding the fleas. Xenopsylla cheopis, the Oriental rat flea, achieved higher infection rates, developed greater bacterial loads, and became infectious more rapidly than Oropsylla montana, a ground squirrel flea. Both flea species required about 10(6) Y. pestis cells per flea to be able to transmit to mice. Most fleas that achieved these levels, however, were incapable of transmitting. Our results suggest that at the time of flea feeding, host blood must contain greater than or equal to 10(6) bacteria/ml to result in detectable Y. pestis infections in these fleas, and greater than or equal to 10(7) bacteria/mL to cause infection levels sufficient for both species to eventually become capable of transmitting Y. pestis to uninfected mice. Yersinia pestis colonies primarily developed in the midguts of O. montana, whereas infections in X. cheopis often developed simultaneously in the proventriculus and the midgut. These findings were visually confirmed by infecting fleas with a strain of Y. pestis that had been transformed with the green fluorescent protein gene.
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页码:552 / 560
页数:9
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