Abstract

BackgroundBovine theileriosis, caused by the haemoprotozoan Theileria orientalis, is an emerging disease in East Asia and Australasia. Previous studies have demonstrated transplacental transmission of various Theileria spp. but molecular confirmation of transplacental transmission of T. orientalis has never been confirmed in the field. In this study, cow-calf (< 48 h old) pairs were sampled across 3 herds; opportunistic samples from aborted foetuses or stillborn calves were also examined. Molecular (multiplex qPCR) and serological (ELISA) methods were used to determine infection prevalence and the presence of anti-Theileria antibodies in each herd. In addition, pregnant heifers and foetal calves were sampled at abattoir and tested for the presence of T. orientalis by qPCR.ResultsThe qPCR results indicated that, even though there was a high prevalence of T. orientalis infection in cows, the rate of transplacental transmission to their calves was low, with only one newborn calf from one herd and one foetus from the abattoir testing positive for T. orientalis DNA. Five aborted foetuses and stillborn calves, 3 of which were derived from a herd experiencing a high number of clinical theileriosis cases at the time of sampling, all tested negative for T. orientalis by qPCR. This suggests that in utero infection of calves with T. orientalis may not be a major driver of abortions during theileriosis outbreaks. Temporal monitoring of 20 calves born to T. orientalis-positive mothers indicated that T. orientalis was detectable in most calves between 10 and 27 days post-partum, consistent with prior field studies on adult cattle introduced to Theileria-affected herds. There was a positive correlation between the ELISA ratio of newborn calves and their mothers within 48 h of calving; however, maternal antibodies were only detectable in some calves and only for 4–4.5 weeks post-partum. All calves displayed high parasite loads peaking at 4–8 weeks post-partum, with only some calves subsequently mounting a detectable adaptive antibody response.ConclusionsThese findings indicate transplacental transmission of T. orientalis appears to play only a minor role in persistence of T. orientalis infection in the field; however calves are highly susceptible to developing high level T. orientalis infections at 4–8 weeks of age regardless of whether maternal antibodies are present post-partum.

Highlights

  • Bovine theileriosis, caused by the haemoprotozoan Theileria orientalis, is an emerging disease in East Asia and Australasia

  • Transplacental transmission of T. orientalis was implicated in the infection and abortion of 100% of calves where the pregnant dams had been experimentally infected via ticks [26], while microscopic studies conducted in Japan suggested that transplacental transmission was occurring in field-affected cattle, but only at a low rate [27]

  • One sample was from a stillborn calf in Herd 1, one sample was from a property in Bungwahl, New South Wales (NSW) near Gloucester and the remaining three samples were diagnostic submissions from a herd in Bega, NSW (Fig. 1) with 100% T. orientalis prevalence and which was experiencing clinical theileriosis cases at the time of sampling

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Summary

Introduction

Bovine theileriosis, caused by the haemoprotozoan Theileria orientalis, is an emerging disease in East Asia and Australasia. In Australasia, bovine theileriosis is caused by the tickborne haemoprotozoan, Theileria orientalis [1,2,3,4] While this disease has been reported in East Asia for many years [4,5,6], the first definitive Australian cases of bovine theileriosis were detected in 2006 and were linked to a particular genotype of the parasite, T. orientalis Ikeda [1, 2, 7,8,9]. Transplacental transmission of T. orientalis was implicated in the infection and abortion of 100% of calves where the pregnant dams had been experimentally infected via ticks [26], while microscopic studies conducted in Japan suggested that transplacental transmission was occurring in field-affected cattle, but only at a low rate [27]

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