Genetic and antigenic variation of the bovine tick-borne pathogen Theileria parva in the Great Lakes region of Central Africa

Theileria parvacauses East Coast fever (ECF), one of the most economically important tick-borne diseases of cattle in sub-Saharan Africa. A live immunisation approach using the infection and treatment method (ITM) provides a strong long-term strain-restricted immunity. However, it typically induces...

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Autores principales: Amzati, Gaston S., Djikeng, Appolinaire, Odongo, David O., Nimpaye, H., Sibeko, K.P., Muhigwa, J.-B.B., Madder, M., Kirschvink, N., Marcotty, T.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106589
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author Amzati, Gaston S.
Djikeng, Appolinaire
Odongo, David O.
Nimpaye, H.
Sibeko, K.P.
Muhigwa, J.-B.B.
Madder, M.
Kirschvink, N.
Marcotty, T.
author_browse Amzati, Gaston S.
Djikeng, Appolinaire
Kirschvink, N.
Madder, M.
Marcotty, T.
Muhigwa, J.-B.B.
Nimpaye, H.
Odongo, David O.
Sibeko, K.P.
author_facet Amzati, Gaston S.
Djikeng, Appolinaire
Odongo, David O.
Nimpaye, H.
Sibeko, K.P.
Muhigwa, J.-B.B.
Madder, M.
Kirschvink, N.
Marcotty, T.
author_sort Amzati, Gaston S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Theileria parvacauses East Coast fever (ECF), one of the most economically important tick-borne diseases of cattle in sub-Saharan Africa. A live immunisation approach using the infection and treatment method (ITM) provides a strong long-term strain-restricted immunity. However, it typically induces a tick-transmissible carrier state in cattle and may lead to spread of antigenically distinct parasites. Thus, understanding the genetic composition ofT. parvais needed prior to the use of the ITM vaccine in new areas. This study examined the sequence diversity and the evolutionary and biogeographical dynamics ofT. parvawithin the African Great Lakes region to better understand the epidemiology of ECF and to assure vaccine safety. Genetic analyses were performed using sequences of two antigen-coding genes,Tp1andTp2, generated among 119T. parvasamples collected from cattle in four agro-ecological zones of DRC and Burundi.The results provided evidence of nucleotide and amino acid polymorphisms in both antigens, resulting in 11 and 10 distinct nucleotide alleles, that predicted 6 and 9 protein variants inTp1andTp2, respectively.Theileria parvasamples showed high variation within populations and a moderate biogeographical sub-structuring due to the widespread major genotypes. The diversity was greater in samples from lowlands and midlands areas compared to those from highlands and other African countries. The evolutionary dynamics modelling revealed a signal of selective evolution which was not preferentially detected within the epitope-coding regions, suggesting that the observed polymorphism could be more related to gene flow rather than recent host immune-based selection. Most alleles isolated in the Great Lakes region were closely related to the components of the trivalent Muguga vaccine.Our findings suggest that the extensive sequence diversity ofT. parvaand its biogeographical distribution mainly depend on host migration and agro-ecological conditions driving tick population dynamics. Such patterns are likely to contribute to the epidemic and unstable endemic situations of ECF in the region. However, the fact that ubiquitous alleles are genetically similar to the components of the Muguga vaccine together with the limited geographical clustering may justify testing the existing trivalent vaccine for cross-immunity in the region.
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spelling CGSpace1065892025-01-27T15:00:52Z Genetic and antigenic variation of the bovine tick-borne pathogen Theileria parva in the Great Lakes region of Central Africa Amzati, Gaston S. Djikeng, Appolinaire Odongo, David O. Nimpaye, H. Sibeko, K.P. Muhigwa, J.-B.B. Madder, M. Kirschvink, N. Marcotty, T. animal health cattle east coast fever tick-borne diseases vaccines livestock theileria parva Theileria parvacauses East Coast fever (ECF), one of the most economically important tick-borne diseases of cattle in sub-Saharan Africa. A live immunisation approach using the infection and treatment method (ITM) provides a strong long-term strain-restricted immunity. However, it typically induces a tick-transmissible carrier state in cattle and may lead to spread of antigenically distinct parasites. Thus, understanding the genetic composition ofT. parvais needed prior to the use of the ITM vaccine in new areas. This study examined the sequence diversity and the evolutionary and biogeographical dynamics ofT. parvawithin the African Great Lakes region to better understand the epidemiology of ECF and to assure vaccine safety. Genetic analyses were performed using sequences of two antigen-coding genes,Tp1andTp2, generated among 119T. parvasamples collected from cattle in four agro-ecological zones of DRC and Burundi.The results provided evidence of nucleotide and amino acid polymorphisms in both antigens, resulting in 11 and 10 distinct nucleotide alleles, that predicted 6 and 9 protein variants inTp1andTp2, respectively.Theileria parvasamples showed high variation within populations and a moderate biogeographical sub-structuring due to the widespread major genotypes. The diversity was greater in samples from lowlands and midlands areas compared to those from highlands and other African countries. The evolutionary dynamics modelling revealed a signal of selective evolution which was not preferentially detected within the epitope-coding regions, suggesting that the observed polymorphism could be more related to gene flow rather than recent host immune-based selection. Most alleles isolated in the Great Lakes region were closely related to the components of the trivalent Muguga vaccine.Our findings suggest that the extensive sequence diversity ofT. parvaand its biogeographical distribution mainly depend on host migration and agro-ecological conditions driving tick population dynamics. Such patterns are likely to contribute to the epidemic and unstable endemic situations of ECF in the region. However, the fact that ubiquitous alleles are genetically similar to the components of the Muguga vaccine together with the limited geographical clustering may justify testing the existing trivalent vaccine for cross-immunity in the region. 2019-12 2020-01-16T11:40:46Z 2020-01-16T11:40:46Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106589 en Open Access Springer Amzati, G.S., Djikeng, A., Odongo, D.O., Nimpaye, H., Sibeko, K.P., Muhigwa, J.B.B., Madder, M., Kirschvink, N. and Marcotty, T. 2019. Genetic and antigenic variation of the bovine tick-borne pathogen Theileria parva in the Great Lakes region of Central Africa. Parasites & Vectors 12:588.
spellingShingle animal health
cattle
east coast fever
tick-borne diseases
vaccines
livestock
theileria parva
Amzati, Gaston S.
Djikeng, Appolinaire
Odongo, David O.
Nimpaye, H.
Sibeko, K.P.
Muhigwa, J.-B.B.
Madder, M.
Kirschvink, N.
Marcotty, T.
Genetic and antigenic variation of the bovine tick-borne pathogen Theileria parva in the Great Lakes region of Central Africa
title Genetic and antigenic variation of the bovine tick-borne pathogen Theileria parva in the Great Lakes region of Central Africa
title_full Genetic and antigenic variation of the bovine tick-borne pathogen Theileria parva in the Great Lakes region of Central Africa
title_fullStr Genetic and antigenic variation of the bovine tick-borne pathogen Theileria parva in the Great Lakes region of Central Africa
title_full_unstemmed Genetic and antigenic variation of the bovine tick-borne pathogen Theileria parva in the Great Lakes region of Central Africa
title_short Genetic and antigenic variation of the bovine tick-borne pathogen Theileria parva in the Great Lakes region of Central Africa
title_sort genetic and antigenic variation of the bovine tick borne pathogen theileria parva in the great lakes region of central africa
topic animal health
cattle
east coast fever
tick-borne diseases
vaccines
livestock
theileria parva
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106589
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