The 16S rRNA gene of Ehrlichia genus was examined from the blood and spleen of 26 wild small mammals that were captured at a canine feed lot where the first case of canine ehrlichiosis was found in south of China in 1998. Samples (3 blood and 1 spleen) from Rattus norvegicus were positive by polymerase chain reaction. The amplimers were then cloned and sequenced. All of the 16S rRNA gene sequence of these samples were found to be same and unique when compared with the other members of genus EHRLICHIA: The most closely related species was Ehrlichia-like sp. Schotti variant (99.03% related), which was detected and identified in Dutch Ixodes ricinus ticks by Schouls in 1999. The organism found on these animals was obviously not the species of E. muris, which was isolated and identified from a wild mouse in Japan in 1995, since the relatedness of this gene between the former and the latter was 93.28%. It is unclear whether this organism can cause disease in other mammals, including human beings.
To identify the causative agent of canine ehrlichiosis that has occurred in the suburbs of Guangzhou, China, since 1998, the 16S rRNA gene was amplified and sequenced. Two sequences of 1,482 and 1,483 base pairs were obtained and named as Gzh981 and Gzh982, respectively. The level of similarity of these two was 91.50%, and Gzh981 closely resembled the 16S rRNA gene of Ehrlichia canis, whereas Gzh982 resembled Ehrlichia platys. We therefore conclude that E. canis and E. platys together caused recent outbreaks of canine ehrlichiosis in China.
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