Screening for the ciliate Buxtonella sulcata in free-ranging dairy cattle on Terceira Island, Azores archipelago
Mário Ribeiro, Sara Gomes-Gonçalves, Alexandra Silva, Guilherme Moreira, Eric Viscogliosi, Magali Chabé, João Rodrigo Mesquita

TL;DR
This study found that nearly half of dairy cows on Terceira Island carry a ciliate called Buxtonella sulcata, which may be more than just a harmless gut resident.
Contribution
The study provides the first molecular screening of Buxtonella sulcata in free-ranging dairy cattle in the Azores.
Findings
49.1% of the 116 cow stool samples tested positive for Buxtonella sulcata.
Twelve distinct genetic sequences of Buxtonella sulcata were identified.
The results suggest a need to investigate the health and productivity impacts of this ciliate in cattle.
Abstract
Buxtonella sulcata is an alveolate ciliate protist, historically considered a commensal of the gastrointestinal tract of cattle. Despite the fact that its cysts are morphologically identical to those of Balantioides coli, molecular identification techniques have shed new light on its role as a pathogen. This work aimed to assess the presence of this ciliate in the population of dairy cattle on the Azorean island of Terceira by means of molecular analyses (ITS1–5.8S–ITS2 rRNA) of stool samples. A total of 116 samples were collected from adult Holstein-Friesian dairy cows, with no signs of gastrointestinal disease. A proportion of 49.1% of the samples were PCR-positive for Bu. sulcata, and 12 different genetic sequences were identified. These findings highlight the need for future research concerning the factors that influence the presence of Bu. sulcata in the gastrointestinal tract of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParasitic Infections and Diagnostics · Helminth infection and control · Parasitic infections in humans and animals
