Abstract

Biological, biochemical, and genetic relationships of Trichinella isolates were assessed and compared from 3 species of Illinois fur-bearing mammals. Tongue muscle collected from 1987 through 1989 from 323 raccoons (Procyon lotor), 9 red fox (Vulpes fulva), and 1 coyote (Canis latrans) were digested and Trichinella muscle larval prevalences and mean intensities (larvae/g) determined. The prevalence and mean intensity of tongue muscle-stage larvae were 2.8% and 44.4% and 326 and 2 larvae/g for raccoon and red fox, respectively. The single coyote examined for muscle larvae was negative. Seven of 13 Trichinella isolates (5 raccoon, 2 red fox) were maintained and amplified in mice. Comparative analyses of DNA from larvae of these isolates and from other Trichinella isolates were performed by dot-blot hybridization using specific repetitive DNA probes. DNA from the 7 Illinois sylvatic isolates reacted with the Trichinella T5 isolate DNA probe pUPB-3.7 and did not cross-react with the Trichinella spiralis probe pBP-2. The sylvatic isolates of Trichinella were also analyzed using 27 allozymes. Their allozymic patterns were similar to Trichinella reference strain T5 from Pennsylvania, except for mannose phosphate isomerase. These results suggest that the Illinois wildlife isolates belong to the Trichinella T5 genotype according to the classification system established by the International Trichinella Reference Centre and as defined here by positive hybridization to the pUPB-3.7 probe. Results from Southern blot analyses using rRNA as a probe and allozyme patterns revealed some heterogeneity among geographical isolates of the T5 genotype.

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