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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2009, p. 1786-1789, Vol. 75, No. 6
0099-2240/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.02554-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Prevalence of Rickettsia Species in Canadian Populations of Dermacentor andersoni and D. variabilis
Shaun J. Dergousoff,*
Andrew J. A. Gajadhar, and
Neil B. Chilton
Department of Biology, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Received 9 November 2008/
Accepted 8 January 2009

ABSTRACT
We determined the prevalence of rickettsiae in
Dermacentor adults
at 15 localities in Canada.
Rickettsia rickettsii was not detected
in any tick, whereas
Rickettsia peacockii was present in 76%
of
Dermacentor andersoni adults and
Rickettsia montanensis in
8% of
Dermacentor variabilis adults. This host specificity was
maintained in localities where both tick species occurred in
sympatry.

INTRODUCTION
Dermacentor andersoni and
Dermacentor variabilis are vectors
of
Rickettsia rickettsii (
6), the etiological agent of Rocky
Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) in humans. RMSF has been a notifiable
disease in the United States since the 1920s, with over 3,600
cases reported between 1997 and 2002 (
9). Nonpathogenic rickettsiae
have also been reported for both tick species (
3,
12,
13). The
detection and identification of
Rickettsia in ticks have greatly
improved in accuracy and sensitivity since the advent of PCR-based
techniques. The rickettsial citrate synthase (
gltA) and the
190-kDa surface protein (
ompA) genes have been used to distinguish
among species of
Rickettsia and to determine the prevalence
of different rickettsiae in
D. andersoni or
D. variabilis adults
within the United States, primarily at localities where these
two tick species do not coexist (
1,
13,
19,
27). Serological
studies of the prevalence of
Rickettsia in the United States
are also based on an examination of ticks from allopatric populations
(
2,
20). Comparisons of the prevalence of rickettsiae in sympatric
and allopatric populations of
D. andersoni and
D. variabilis would provide insight into the host specificity and transmission
of
Rickettsia species.
RMSF is not a reportable disease in Canada. As a consequence, little is known of the frequency of RMSF, except for a few published cases in Alberta between 1923 and 1943 (5, 11, 15). There is no detailed information of the distribution and prevalence of rickettsial species in Canada, even though D. andersoni and D. variabilis are relatively common (28). The geographic ranges of these tick species in Canada are largely allopatric, except for a zone of sympatry in central Saskatchewan (28). The aim of the present study was to determine the species of Rickettsia present and their relative prevalence in adult ticks from allopatric and sympatric populations of D. andersoni and D. variabilis in Canada.
Total genomic DNA (gDNA) was extracted and column purified (10) from 1,326 adult ticks collected in 2005 (May through July) and 2007 (April through June) from 15 localities (Table 1). The presence of rickettsiae in ticks was determined by amplification of a 381-bp fragment of gltA by PCR from the tick gDNA using primers RpCS.877p and RpCS.1258n (22) and the following conditions: 95°C for 5 min, followed by 25 cycles of 95°C for 30 s, 60°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 30 s and a final extension at 74°C for 5 min. The results of the PCR analyses revealed that a large proportion (76%) of D. andersoni adults were infected with Rickettsia, while relatively few (8%) D. variabilis adults tested positive for Rickettsia (Table 1). There was no significant difference in prevalence of Rickettsia in D. andersoni males (73%; n = 205) and females (79%; n = 303; P = 0.128), or in the prevalence of Rickettsia in D. variabilis males (9%; n = 382) and females (7%; n = 436; P = 0.420). The prevalence of infection in D. andersoni varied among localities (36 to 96%); the lowest prevalence was recorded within Danielson Provincial Park (Table 1). The prevalence of Rickettsia in D. variabilis was very low (0 to 8%) at most localities, except within Blackstrap Provincial Park, where 33% of ticks were Rickettsia positive (Table 1). There was heterogeneity in the prevalence of Rickettsia within Blackstrap Provincial Park with a significantly greater (P < 0.001) proportion of Rickettsia-infected D. variabilis individuals on the western side of Blackstrap Lake (39%; n = 115) than on the eastern side (4%; n = 26).
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TABLE 1. Localities and coordinates of the collection sites of D. andersoni and D. variabilis adults within Canada and the number of ticks that were positive for infection with Rickettsia using PCR analyses of the gltA gene
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Genetic variation among the 452
gltA amplicons derived from
Rickettsia-positive ticks was examined using single-strand conformation
polymorphism (SSCP) analyses (
10,
14). Two different SSCP banding
patterns (i.e., profiles) were detected among samples: one profile
(type I) was displayed by all
D. andersoni individuals positive
for
Rickettsia, and the second (type II) was displayed only
by
D. variabilis individuals positive for
Rickettsia (Fig.
1).
The
gltA sequences derived from 11 column-purified amplicons
of type I were identical to each other and to the sequence for
Rickettsia peacockii (GenBank accession number AF129885) (
25).
The eight type II
gltA amplicons derived from
Rickettsia-infected
D. variabilis individuals were identical in nucleotide sequence
to one another and to a sequence for
Rickettsia montanensis (accession number U74756) (
23). The presence of
R. peacockii in
D. andersoni adults and
R. montanensis in
D. variabilis adults
was confirmed by the amplification and sequencing of a 532-bp
fragment of
ompA (
22) from a single individual of each tick
species that contained rickettsiae using primers
Rr190.70p and
Rr190.602n (
22) and the same conditions used for
gltA except
that 30 amplification cycles were used. The
ompA amplicon from
D. andersoni was identical in sequence to that reported previously
for
R. peacockii (accession number U55821) (
19). The
ompA amplicon
from
D. variabilis most closely matched the sequence for
R. montanensis (accession number AY543682) (
1), but it differed
at a single nucleotide position. The results of a phylogenetic
analysis showed that there was strong statistical support for
the inclusion of the
Rickettsia species from
D. variabilis within
the clade of
R. montanensis (Fig.
2).
Our molecular analyses of 508
D. andersoni and 818
D. variabilis adults from 15 localities revealed the presence of
R. peacockii in
D. andersoni and
R. montanensis in
D. variabilis. This host-specificity
was maintained at the seven localities where both tick species
occurred in sympatry. These findings are consistent with the
results of studies conducted in the United States, where
R. peacockii has been reported only for
D. andersoni (
7,
19) and
R. montanensis only for
D. variabilis (
1,
2,
12,
21). Philip
and Casper (
20) reported
R. montanensis for
D. andersoni from
the western side of Bitterroot Valley (Montana), based on serotyping
of rickettsiae from ticks. However, this probably represents
a case of an incorrect identification of the rickettsiae. Philip
and Casper (
20) demonstrated that there were four serotypes
within 106 rickettsial isolates from
D. andersoni and attributed
these to be
R. rickettsii (9%),
Rickettsia rhipicephali (44%),
Rickettsia bellii (i.e., 369-C; 39%) and
R. montanensis (i.e.,
"
Rickettsia montana"; 8%). In contrast, Burgdorfer et al. (
7)
showed that
R. peacockii occurs on the western side of Bitterroot
Valley at a prevalence of 8 to 16%. It is, therefore, likely
that the fourth rickettsial species detected by Philip and Casper
(
20) was not
R. montanensis but
R. peacockii, especially if
the antibodies used in their assay were cross-reactive with
both species. If this were the case, then
R. montanensis would
also represent a rickettsial species that is host specific for
D. variabilis.
We only detected single-species rickettsial infections in both tick species. This is typical for Dermacentor spp. (1, 13, 27), except for the reports of a single D. variabilis adult from Ohio infected with R. bellii, R. montanensis, and R. rickettsii (8) and of a single Dermacentor occidentalis adult infected with R. bellii and R. rhipicephali (27). The prevalence of R. peacockii in D. andersoni at different localities (36 to 96%) was significantly greater than that for R. montanensis in D. variabilis (0 to 33%). This is likely due to the mode of transmission of R. peacockii, which is thought to be exclusively transovarial (i.e., from female ticks to their offspring) (7, 19). The prevalence of R. montanensis in D. variabilis at 12 of the 15 sites in the present study (0 to 8%) was similar to that for D. variabilis populations in Ohio (<0.1%) (21), Massachusetts (1%) (12), and Maryland (4%) (1). The relatively low prevalence of R. montanensis in ticks compared to that for R. peacockii suggests that horizontal transmission is required for the maintenance of this species in populations of D. variabilis. R. montanensis has been detected in mice (Peromyscus spp.) and voles (Microtus spp.) (18), hosts used by D. variabilis (4, 16), suggesting that small mammals may act as reservoirs for this species of Rickettsia.
The results of the present study also showed that the other rickettsial species recorded in D. andersoni and/or D. variabilis in the United States (i.e., the pathogenic R. rickettsii [6] and the nonpathogenic R. bellii and R. rhipicephali [13]) were not detected in any of the 1,326 ticks tested. The prevalence of R. rickettsii in D. andersoni adults in the Bitterroot Valley of Montana varies from 1.5 to 5% (6), while infections of R. rickettsii in D. variabilis range from 0.1% in Ohio (21) to 8.6% in Maryland (24). The lack of detection of R. rickettsii in D. andersoni from the nine localities in Canada may be associated with the relatively high proportion of ticks infected with R. peacockii. Although R. peacockii is closely related to R. rickettsii (19), it appears to be nonpathogenic to D. andersoni and has no effect on the fecundity of infected females (18). The greater incidence of RMSF on the western side of Bitterroot Valley compared to the eastern side of the valley has been shown to be associated with a significantly lower prevalence of R. peacockii (7, 19). Only 8 to 16% of D. andersoni on the western side of the Bitterroot Valley are infected with R. peacockii (7), whereas the prevalence is 70 to 80% for ticks on the eastern side (7, 19), which is equivalent to the average prevalence of R. peacockii in D. andersoni in the present study (76%). It has also been shown that establishment of R. rickettsii in the ovarial tissues of D. andersoni is prevented by an "interference phenomenon" when ticks are already infected with R. peacockii (7). D. variabilis adults infected with R. montanensis are also known to prevent the establishment of R. rickettsii (17). Thus, R. peacockii and R. montanensis have epidemiological significance with respect to R. rickettsii because of a negative effect on its enzootic maintenance. However, the relatively low prevalence of D. variabilis adults infected with R. montanensis in 13 of the Canadian localities we examined would not account for the apparent absence of R. rickettsii. Therefore, other factors must be responsible for this.

Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The sequences of the
gltA and
ompA genes for representative
samples have been deposited in GenBank under accession numbers
FM883668 to FM883671.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Funding for this work was provided to N.B.C. from the Natural
Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
and the Canadian Foundation for Innovation. S.J.D. is a recipient
of a NSERC Graduate Scholarship.
We thank John Allen, Alvin Gajadhar, Murray Lankester, Brad Scandrett, and Travis Quirk, who provided some ticks, and Lorilee Flavelle and Chantel Krakowetz for technical assistance.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Biology, University of Saskatchewan, 112 Science Place, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada S7N 5E2. Phone: (306) 966-4407. Fax: (306) 966-4461. E-mail:
shaun.dergousoff{at}usask.ca 
Published ahead of print on 16 January 2009. 

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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2009, p. 1786-1789, Vol. 75, No. 6
0099-2240/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.02554-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.