Abstract

Two PCR methods were compared for their sensitivity in detecting cultured Leishmania major, before being used to estimate infection rates in female sandflies ( Phlebotomus papatasi) collected from peridomestic animal shelters and the nearby burrows of the gerbil reservoir hosts, Rhombomys opimus, in Isfahan province, central Iran. A semi-nested PCR was used to amplify a fragment of minicircle kinetoplast (k) DNA with a length and sequence diagnostic for L. major, and a nested PCR was developed to amplify a fragment containing the internal transcribed spacers of the ribosomal RNA genes (ITS-rDNA) with a sequence diagnostic for L. major. The semi-nested PCR was less sensitive than the nested PCR when using DNA extracted from cultured promastigotes of L. major, but it was more sensitive for detecting L. major in wild-caught sandflies. At the edges of two Isfahan villages, infection rates were significantly higher in P. papatasi collected outside gerbil burrows (14/28) compared with those from peridomestic animal shelters (2/21). This is the first record of L. major detected in P. papatasi from peridomestic sites in Isfahan province.

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