The incrimination of three trypanosome species in clinically affected German shepherd dogs in Sudan
Date
2014
Authors
Mossaad, Ehab
Satti, A. Rawan
Fadul, Abdeen
Suganuma, Keisuke
Salim, Bashir
Elamin, E. A.
Musinguzi, Simon Peter
Xuan, Xuenan
Inoue, Noboru
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer
Abstract
Canine trypanosomosisis (CT) is a common disease
caused by tsetse- and non-tsetse-transmitted trypanosomes
worldwide. The severity of the disease varies from
acute, sub-acute to chronic with non-specific clinical signs.
Here, we attempt in a cross-sectional study to assess the current
situation of CT and the role of dogs in transmitting trypanosomes
to other domesticated animals. The study was carried
out during July 2016 on 50 caged German shepherd dogs
in Khartoum State to investigate the prevalence of dog
trypanosomosis using both serological (CATT/Trypanosoma
evansi) and molecular (KIN-PCR, RoTat1.2 VSG-PCR and
TviCatL-PCR) tests to detect possible trypanosome infections.
CATT/T. evansi detected antibodies against T. evansi in 15
(30%) dogs, while parasite DNA was detected in 17 (34%)
dogs by RoTat1.2 PCR. In contrast, a KIN-PCR detected the
subgenus Trypanozoon, Trypanosoma congolense savannah,
T. congolense Kenya and T. vivax in 36 (72%), 3 (6%), 1 (2%),
and 2 (4%) dogs, respectively. However, a species-specific
PCR for Trypanosoma vivax was detected 7 (14%) positive
cases. We concluded that CT was caused by at least three
species of trypanosomes, namely T. evansi, T. vivax and
T. congolense. Trypanozoon other than T. evansi could not
be ruled out since other tsetse-transmitted trypanosomes have
also been detected and species-specific PCRs were not used.
This study illustrates that dogs play an important role in the
transmission dynamic and the epidemiology of the
abovementioned trypanosome species.
Description
Keywords
Dog, Trypanosoma evansi, Trypanosoma vivax, Trypanosoma congolense
Citation
Mossaad, E., Satti, R.A., Fadul, A., Suganuma, K., Salim, B., Elamin, E.A., Musinguzi, S.P., Xuan, X. and Inoue, N., 2017. The incrimination of three trypanosome species in clinically affected German shepherd dogs in Sudan. Parasitology research, 116(11), pp.2921-2925.