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Rickettsia

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Rickettsia

 

a genus of small pathogenic bacteria that multiply only in host cells. It is named after the American pathologist H. T. Ricketts (1871–1910), who in 1909 discovered the causative agent of Rocky Mountain spotted fever. Rickettsia is a short rod (0.3 × 0.3 to 2 μm) with rounded ends occurring singly or in pairs. The rods are nonsporogenous, nonmotile, and gram-negative; they multiply by transverse division. The rickettsiae are no larger than some viruses but are classified as bacteria since they divide and have cell walls, cytoplasmic membranes, ribosomes, and nuclei. In addition, they synthesize protein, the nucleic acids DNA and RNA, ATP, and the enzymes of intermediate metabolism, chiefly those of the tricarboxylic acid cycle.

Being intracellular parasites, the rickettsiae make use of growth factors from cells of the host organism. The cytoplasmic membrane of the rickettsiae is highly permeable, a result of their adaptation to a parasitic mode of life. The rickettsiae do not grow on the ordinary nutrient media and require chick embryos or animal cell cultures. They are sensitive to unfavorable physical or chemical factors and to some antibiotics.

The rickettsiae include the causative agents of epidemic typhus (Rickettsia prowazekii), murine typhus (R. mooseri), Q fever (Coxiella burnetii), and other endemic or widespread rickettsioses.

A. A. IMSHENETSKII

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
The patient might have had rickettsia on his skin and then been inoculated by the leech bite or by scratching after the bite (7).
As a first approach to detect Rickettsia in nature we propose a broad screening on larvae and nymphs collected in different habitats and over different time periods.
[22] This form of testing is rapid and sensitive, but antibody cross-reactivity between Rickettsia species renders the test unsuitable for discerning the exact cause of the infection.
The sequenced products had a similarity of 99% to Oceanrickettsia ariakensis (accession number DQ123914), 98% for unidentified bacteria, 94% for uncultured rickettsia, and 89% for the genus Rickettsia according to Blast results.
sanguineus specimens tested positive for Rickettsia DNA.
Como control positivo se utilizo una muestra de Rickettsia rickettsii proporcionada por el Instituto de Investigaciones en Ciencias Veterinarias (UABC) y una mezcla sin ADN para el control negativo.
The aim was to prospectively study patients presenting symptoms of and being diagnosed with uveitis, regardless of localization in the eye, to investigate if serological signs of Borrelia or Rickettsia infection or exposure are associated with acute or recurrent uveitis, for what would otherwise be considered a noninfectious uveitis.
Rickettsia was only found in district Multan and Vehari samples but it was not present in other regions, Cardinium was present in Sadiqabad, Rahim Yar Khan and Vehari, Arsenophonus endosymbiont was amplified from Sadiqabad, Rahim Yar Khan and Khanewal.
Since the assay is nonspecific, the positive serologic reaction could represent an infection with another SFGR pathogen (eg, R parkeri, R akari) or a rickettsia of unknown pathogenicity (eg, R amblyommii, R montanensis).
Gulf coast tick rash illness in Mississippi caused by Rickettsia parkeri.
The disease is caused by the obligate intracellular bacterial pathogen Rickettsia rickettsii (Brumpt).
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