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Vet Pathol 40:149-156 (2003)
© 2003 American College of Veterinary Pathologists

Ehrlichia platys (Anaplasma platys) in Dogs from Maracaibo, Venezuela: An Ultrastructural Study of Experimental and Natural Infections

C. Arraga-Alvarado, M. Palmar, O. Parra and P. Salas

Unidad de Investigaciones Clínicas—Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias, Universidad del Zulia, Maracaibo, Venezuela (CA-A, OP); Instituto de Investigaciones Biológicas—Facultad de Medicina, Universidad del Zulia, Maracaibo, Venezuela (MP); and Unidad de Microscopía Electrónica, Universidad Nacional Experimental Francisco de Miranda, Coro, Venezuela (PS)

Since 1982 Ehrlichia platys, now emended as Anaplasma platys, has been diagnosed in dogs from Maracaibo, Venezuela, using buffy coat smears stained with Dip Quick. Three dogs were inoculated with an A. platys strain. When parasitemia reached 60–97%, blood samples obtained from the inoculated dogs and from two naturally infected dogs were centrifuged to obtain platelet-rich plasma, which was mixed with 0.1% glutaraldehyde at 37 C for 10 minutes. Platelet pellets were fixed in 3% glutaraldehyde for 72 hours and processed for conventional transmission electron microscopy. Platelets contained pleomorphic organisms with a distinct double membrane that was not observed when the bodies were in a determinate developmental stage. There were 1–15 individual bodies included in a host cell vacuole. The organisms had an electron-lucent inner area, whereas the internal surface of their inner plasma membranes exhibited an electron-dense rough substance. In naturally infected dogs, organisms with different ultrastructural features were found inside the same platelet. Some organisms contained central dense material surrounded by a pale zone, which was in turn surrounded by a moderately dense peripheral area. Other organisms contained an eccentrically electron-dense material. The intravacuolar space appeared fully electron-lucent. Each organism usually exhibited inner fine strands. Empty structures displaying junctions with the vacuolar membrane were observed. Our results indicate that distinct ultrastructural characteristics are associated with different stages of A. platys development and may differ among A. platys strains.


Key words: Anaplasma platys; Ehrlichia platys; dogs; electron microscopy.

Request reprints from Dr. C. Arraga-Alvarado, Policlínica Veterinaria, Universidad del Zulia Avenida 25, Sector Grano de Oro. Apartado Postal 15157 (C.C. Galerías), Maracaibo, Venezuela. E-mail: mpalmar{at}luz.ve.







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