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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, November 2001, p. 5161-5165, Vol. 67, No. 11
Department of Immunology and Medical Zoology,
Fukui Medical University, Matsuoka, Fukui
910-1193,1 Department of Microbiology,
School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Shizuoka, Shizuoka
422-8526,2 Fukui Prefectural Institute
of Public Health, Fukui 910-8551,3
Research Laboratory of Ohara General Hospital, Fukushima
960-0195,4 Laboratory of Molecular
Microbiology, Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Science, Fukuyama
University, Fukuyama 729-0292,5 and
Experimental Animal Center, Miyazaki Medical College, Kiyotake
889-1692,6 Japan; and Department of
Microbiology, Faculty of Life Science, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou,
People's Republic of China7
Received 10 April 2001/Accepted 3 August 2001
In May 1999, field surveys of Lyme disease spirochetes were
conducted around the Tianshan Mountains in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in northwestern People's Republic of China. Ixodes
persulcatus ticks were obtained in a Tianchi Lake valley with
primary forest, while the tick fauna was poor in the semidesert or at
higher altitudes in this region. Species identities were confirmed by
molecular analysis in which an internal transcribed spacer sequence was used. Of 55 adult ticks, 22 (40%) were positive for spirochetes as
determined by Barbour-Stoenner-Kelly culture passages. In addition, some rodents, including Apodemus uralensis (5 of 14 animals) and Cricetulus longicaudatus (the only animal
examined), and some immature stages of I. persulcatus (4 of 11 ticks) that had fed on A. uralensis were positive
for spirochetes. Based on 5S-23S rRNA intergenic spacer restriction
fragment length polymorphism analysis and reactivity with monoclonal
antibodies, 35 cultures (including double isolation cultures) were
identified as Borrelia garinii (20 isolates, including 9 Eurasian pattern B isolates and 11 Asian pattern C isolates),
Borrelia afzelii (10 pattern D isolates), and mixed
cultures (5 cultures, including isolates that produced B.
garinii patterns B and C plus B. afzelii pattern D). These findings revealed that Lyme disease pathogens are distributed in the mountainous areas in northwestern China even though it is an
arid region, and they also confirmed the specific relationship between
I. persulcatus and genetic patterns of
Borrelia spp. on the Asian continent.
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.11.5161-5165.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Lyme Disease Borrelia spp. in Ticks
and Rodents from Northwestern China
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Fukui Medical
University, Matsuoka, Fukui 910-1193, Japan. Phone: 81-776-61-8330. Fax: 81-776-25-0663. E-mail: acaritakada{at}nifty.com.
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