First report on the molecular detection and genetic diversity of Anaplasma marginale in healthy dairy cattle in Khon Kaen province, Thailand
I Putu Gede Yudhi Arjentinia, Bamphen Keomoungkhoun, Chaiyapas Thamrongyoswittayakul, Somboon Sangmaneedet, Weerapol Taweenan

TL;DR
This study reports the first molecular detection and genetic diversity of Anaplasma marginale in dairy cattle in Khon Kaen, Thailand, revealing important insights for disease control.
Contribution
The first molecular detection and genetic analysis of Anaplasma marginale in dairy cattle in Khon Kaen province, Thailand.
Findings
A. marginale was detected in 12.72% of 385 dairy cattle in Khon Kaen.
Genetic diversity was observed with high similarity to isolates from Australia, China, Spain, and the USA.
The study identified significant genetic variability in the msp4 gene of A. marginale.
Abstract
Bovine anaplasmosis (BA) is one of the most important diseases of ruminants worldwide, causing significant economic losses in the livestock industry due to the high morbidity and mortality in susceptible cattle herds. Anaplasma marginale is the main causative agent of BA occurring worldwide in tropical and subtropical regions. This study aimed to investigate the first molecular detection and genetic diversity of A. marginale in dairy cattle in Khon Kaen Province, Thailand. Blood samples were collected from 385 lactating cows from 40 dairy farms in five districts of Khon Kaen, regardless of age and health status. To detect A. marginale, all DNA preparations were used for molecular diagnosis using a single polymerase chain reaction with the msp4 gene target. A phylogenetic tree was constructed from the msp4 gene sequences using molecular genetic characterization. Genetic diversity was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVector-borne infectious diseases · Vector-Borne Animal Diseases · Viral Infections and Vectors
