Bartonella henselae in porpoise blood

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Abstract

We report detection of Bartonella henselae DNA in blood samples from 2 harbor porpoises (Phocoena phocoena). By using real-time polymerase chain reaction, we directly amplified Bartonella species DNA from blood of a harbor porpoise stranded along the northern North Carolina coast and from a pre-enrichment blood culture from a second harbor porpoise. The second porpoise was captured out of habitat (in a low-salinity canal along the northern North Carolina coast) and relocated back into the ocean. Subsequently, DNA was amplified by conventional polymerase chain reaction for DNA sequencing. The 16S-23S intergenic transcribed spacer region obtained from each porpoise was 99.8% similar to that of B. henselae strain San Antonio 2 (SA2), whereas both heme-binding phage-associated pap31 gene sequences were 100% homologous to that of B. henselae SA2. Currently, the geographic distribution, mode of transmission, reservoir potential, and pathogenicity of bloodborne Bartonella species in porpoises have not been determined.

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APA

Maggi, R. G., Harms, C. A., Hohn, A. A., Pabst, D. A., McLellan, W. A., Walton, W. J., … Breitschwerdt, E. B. (2005). Bartonella henselae in porpoise blood. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 11(12), 1894–1898. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1112.050969

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