Molecular epidemiology, associated risk factors, and phylogeny of Theileria annulata infecting buffaloes and cattle from different agro-climatic regions of Punjab, Pakistan

Tropical theileriosis is the most prevalent hemoprotozoan disease in Pakistan. The study aimed to investigate the epidemiology and evolutionary relationship of in bovines in diverse agro-climatic regions of Punjab, Pakistan. 800 blood specimens were collected from asymptomatic cattle (n=480) and buf...

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Published inIranian journal of veterinary research Vol. 24; no. 3; pp. 247 - 257
Main Authors Ahmad Atif, F, Usman Nazir, M, Zahid Abbas, R, Mehnaz, S, Adnan Saeed, M, Ben Said, M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Iran School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Shiraz 2023
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Summary:Tropical theileriosis is the most prevalent hemoprotozoan disease in Pakistan. The study aimed to investigate the epidemiology and evolutionary relationship of in bovines in diverse agro-climatic regions of Punjab, Pakistan. 800 blood specimens were collected from asymptomatic cattle (n=480) and buffaloes (n=320) using a multistage sampling method from Sargodha (n=400) and Multan (n=400) districts. The samples were assessed for blood smear microscopy and gene based PCR. Twenty samples were collected from each union council of each district. The overall prevalence of infection in bovines was 9% and 17.13% as determined by blood smear analysis and PCR, respectively. The disease positivity in cattle and buffaloes was respectively 10.21% and 20.42% by blood smear screening and 7.19%, 12.19% by PCR. The overall PCR based prevalence in the Sargodha and Multan districts was 19% and 15.25%, respectively. Absence of rural poultry, tick infestation, and a history of tick-borne diseases had significant effect in cattle. Tick infestation and age were the main statistically significant disease determinants in buffaloes. The evolutionary analysis of the gene showed that the Pakistani isolate infecting buffalo was related to those from Iran, India, Egypt, and Sudan. The isolate from cattle was genetically close to those from Pakistan, India, Iran, Iraq, and Turkey. It can be concluded that biotic and abiotic factors contribute to disease occurrence. The current study will help to devise control strategies to prevent substantial economic losses.
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ISSN:1728-1997
2252-0589
DOI:10.22099/IJVR.2023.47219.6811