| Kwang-Jun Lee | 2 Articles |
Bovine borreliosis, caused by Borrelia theileri which is transmitted via hard tick bites, is associated with mild clinical symptoms, such as fever, lethargy, hemoglobinuria, anorexia, and anemia. Borrelia theileri infects various animals, such as cattle, deer, horses, goats, sheep, and wild ruminants, in Africa, Australia, and South America. Notably, no case of B. theileri infection has been reported in Korean cattle to date. In this study, 101 blood samples were collected from a Korean indigenous cattle breed, among which 1.98% tested positive for B. theileri via nested PCR. The obtained sequences exhibited high homology with B. theileri strains identified in other regions. Phylogenetic analysis of 16S rRNA confirmed the B. theileri group affiliation; however, flagellin B sequences exhibited divergence, potentially due to regional evolutionary differences. This study provides the first molecular confirmation of B. theileri infection in Korean livestock. Further isolation and nucleotide sequence analyses are necessary to better understand the presence of B. theileri strains in cows in Korea.
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Coxiella burnetii is an environmentally stable intracellular bacterium responsible for severe global outbreaks of the zoonotic disease, Q fever. Q fever is transmitted by the inhalation of aerosols contaminated with the birth products and excretions of infected animals, mainly of sheep and goats. A 28-year-old cattle raiser presented with headache and fever without a significant medical history, although his cattle herd had previously been diagnosed with brucellosis. He spent time outdoors but reported no tick bites or eschar. Initial evaluation revealed mild thrombocytopenia and elevated aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, and C-reactive protein levels. On day 2 after disease onset, his blood tested positive for the IS1111 gene of C. burnetii by nested PCR. After amplifying C. burnetii in severe combined immunodeficient mice, the pathogen was isolated using a cell culture system. The isolated CH12 strain was confirmed via PCR, nucleotide sequence analysis, and whole-genome sequencing. This study reports a case of acute Q fever in Korea, in which C. burnetii was isolated and characterized using whole-genome sequencing.
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