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Título: A holstein heifer infected with Neospora caninum NcUru3 congenitally transmits this strain to a viable offspring although infection does not protect her from aborting by a different N. caninum genotype in the subsequent gestation
Autor: Giannitti, Federico
Aráoz, Virginia
da Silva Silveira, Caroline
Francia, María E.
Robello, Carlos
Cabrera, Andrés
Tipo: Artículo
Palabras clave: abortion, dairy cattle, genetic diversity, Neospora caninum, multilocus microsatellite typing, molecular epidemiology, pathology, reproductive diseases
Fecha de publicación: 2022
Resumen: Neospora caninum is a leading cause of bovine abortion worldwide. Although the genetic diversity of this apicomplexan parasite has long been recognized, there is little information on whether infection with different genotypes results in different clinical outcomes or whether infection by a given genotype impairs protective immunity against abortion induced by different genotypes. Here, we provide evidence supporting that natural subclinical infection with isolate NcUru of N. caninum in a pregnant heifer did not provide protection against abortion caused by a different N. caninum genotype in the subsequent gestation. A Holstein heifer delivered a healthy calf congenitally infected with N. caninum. Specific anti -N. caninum IgG was detected by indirect ELISA in sera obtained from the dam at calving and the calf before ingestion of colostrum, indicating in utero exposure to the parasite in the latter. A N. caninum strain named NcUru was isolated and characterized by multilocus microsatellite typing from the brain of this neonate euthanized at days of age. Sixty days after calving, the cow got pregnant, although she aborted spontaneously at ∼6 months of gestation. Pathologic examination of the aborted fetus and placenta revealed typical lesions of neosporosis, including encephalitis, myocarditis, hepatitis, myositis, and placentitis. Neospora caninum DNA was amplified from the fetal brain, heart, kidney, and placenta, and multilocus microsatellite typing revealed a genotype that differed from isolate NcUru at the level of microsatellite marker A (MSA). Serum obtained from the dam at the time of abortion had IgG that cross recognized isolate NcUru , as demonstrated by immunoblotting, indicating that the humoral immune response did not prevent the other genotype from infecting the fetus and inducing fetoplacental lesions and abortion. This is the first description of one same dam transmitting two N. caninum genotypes to her offspring in subsequent gestations.
EN: Front. Vet. Sci. 9, 2022
Financiadores: Agencia Nacional de Investigación e Innovación (ANII)
Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria (INIA)
Citación: GIANNITTI, F., ARÁOZ, V., DA SILVA SILVEIRA, C., y otros. A holstein heifer infected with Neospora caninum NcUru3 congenitally transmits this strain to a viable offspring although infection does not protect her from aborting by a different N. caninum genotype in the subsequent gestation. Front. Vet. Sci [en línea] 2022, 9. DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2022.889157
Licencia: Licencia Creative Commons Atribución (CC - By 4.0)
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos - Instituto de Higiene



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