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Title: Molecular characterization of "Candidatus Anaplasma testudinis": An emerging pathogen in the threatened Florida gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus). Author: Crosby FL, Wellehan JFX, Pertierra L, Wendland LD, Lundgren AM, Barbet AF, Brown MB. Journal: Ticks Tick Borne Dis; 2021 May; 12(3):101672. PubMed ID: 33561680. Abstract: Members of the family Anaplasmataceae are obligate intracellular bacteria that replicate within membrane bound vacuoles in the cytoplasm of cells in vertebrate and invertebrate hosts. This study reports a putative new Anaplasma species in gopher tortoises in Florida. Two Florida gopher tortoises (Gopherus polyphemus) presented at the University of Florida Veterinary Hospital with anemia and intracytoplasmic vacuoles filled with bacteria within erythrocytes. The bacteria within these parasitophorous vacuoles were morphologically similar to Anaplasma marginale. We inoculated ISE6 cells with blood from one tortoise and isolated bacterial colonies consistent with A. marginale. Molecular characterization targeting Anaplasmataceae 16S rRNA sequences indicated that the clinical isolate, named here provisionally as "Candidatus Anaplasma testudinis", grouped within the genus Anaplasma on a separate clade, most closely related to the A. marginale, Anaplasma ovis and Anaplasma centrale group. We next screened archived red blood cells from 38 wild gopher tortoises with documented clinical anemia. Fourteen of the 38 wild tortoises, representing 5 of 11 geographical locations were PCR-positive for Anaplasmataceae spp. Sequencing analysis revealed 16S rRNA sequence identical to "Ca. A. testudinis". The clinical presentation of significant anemia associated with "Ca. A. testudinis" in a threatened species could have conservation implications. Importantly, the availability of a clinical isolate will aid further studies to develop diagnostic tests and to investigate potential tick vectors and infectivity for other wildlife and domestic animal species.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]