Glen R. Needham
Ohio State University
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Featured researches published by Glen R. Needham.
Journal of Insect Physiology | 1995
Deborah C. Jaworski; Frank A. Simmen; William J. Lamoreaux; Lewis B. Coons; Mark T. Muller; Glen R. Needham
A complementary DNA clone from salivary glands of feeding female Amblyomma americanum ticks has been characterized as encoding calreticulin. Calreticulin, a major endoplasmic reticulum (ER) calcium-binding protein, appears to be secreted in Amblyomma and Dermacentor saliva. Evidence is accummulating that calreticulin performs roles unrelated to calcium storage. Unlike most known calreticulins, tick-secreted calreticulin lacks the ER retention signal, KDEL. This is the first molecular cloning of a specific tick salivary gland protein. The finding of a secreted calreticulin in tick saliva suggests a role for calreticulin in blood feeding through host immunosuppression or antihemostasis.
Veterinary Parasitology | 2008
Roger W. Stich; John J. Schaefer; William G. Bremer; Glen R. Needham; Sathaporn Jittapalapong
The ehrlichioses have been subject to increasing interest from veterinary and public health perspectives, but experimental studies of these diseases and their etiologic agents can be challenging. Ehrlichia canis, the primary etiologic agent of canine monocytic ehrlichiosis, is relatively well characterized and offers unique advantages and opportunities to study interactions between a monocytotropic pathogen and both its vertebrate and invertebrate hosts. Historically, advances in tick-borne disease control strategies have typically followed explication of tick-pathogen-vertebrate interactions, thus it is reasonable to expect novel, more sustainable approaches to control of these diseases as the transmission of their associated infections are investigated at the molecular through ecological levels. Better understanding of the interactions between E. canis and its canine and tick hosts would also elucidate similar interactions for other Ehrlichia species as well as the potential roles of canine sentinels, reservoirs and models of tick-borne zoonoses. This article summarizes natural exposure studies and experimental investigations of E. canis in the context of what is understood about biological vectors of tick-borne Anaplasmataceae.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2002
Roger W. Stich; Yasuko Rikihisa; S. A. Ewing; Glen R. Needham; Debra Grover; Sathaporn Jittapalapong
ABSTRACT Detection of vector-borne pathogens is necessary for investigation of their association with vertebrate and invertebrate hosts. The ability to detect Ehrlichia spp. within individual experimentally infected ticks would be valuable for studies to evaluate the relative competence of different vector species and transmission scenarios. The purpose of this study was to develop a sensitive PCR assay based on oligonucleotide sequences from the unique Ehrlichia canis gene, p30, to facilitate studies that require monitoring this pathogen in canine and tick hosts during experimental transmission. Homologous sequences for Ehrlichia chaffeensis p28 were compared to sequences of primers derived from a sequence conserved among E. canis isolates. Criteria for primer selection included annealing scores, identity of the primers to homologous E. chaffeensis sequences, and the availability of similarly optimal primers that were nested within the target template sequence. The p30-based assay was at least 100-fold more sensitive than a previously reported nested 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA)-based assay and did not amplify the 200-bp target amplicon from E. chaffeensis, the human granulocytic ehrlichiosis agent, or Ehrlichia muris DNA. The assay was used to detect E. canis in canine carrier blood and in experimentally infected Rhipicephalus sanguineus ticks. Optimized procedures for preparing tissues from these hosts for PCR assay are described. Our results indicated that this p30-based PCR assay will be useful for experimental investigations, that it has potential as a routine test, and that this approach to PCR assay design may be applicable to other pathogens that occur at low levels in affected hosts.
Experimental and Applied Acarology | 2002
I.G. Horak; L.J. Fourie; Heloise Heyne; Jane B. Walker; Glen R. Needham
This paper records the identities of 558 ixodid ticks feeding on 194 humans in South Africa. These ticks belonged to 20 species in six genera and those most frequently encountered were Amblyomma hebraeum, Haemaphysalis leachi, Hyalommamarginatum rufipes, Hyalomma truncatum, Rhipicephalus appendiculatus, Rhipicephalus gertrudae and Rhipicephalus simus. With the exception of the larvae of R. appendiculatus, the incidents of these ticks feeding on humans correlated well with their seasonal occurrences on preferred hosts. Ticks were also collected at monthly intervals, for 14 consecutive months, from the clothing of a game-guard providing protection for field-workers engaged in the collection, by means of flannel strips, of free-living ticks from the vegetation of four localities in the southern region of the Kruger National Park. In addition, with the exception of 3 months when the particular worker was absent, ticks that fed on one of the field-workers were collected over the same 14-month period. A total of 54,429 free-living ticks belonging to 14 species and six genera were collected from the vegetation at the four localities during this time and 3751 ticks belonging to 11 species and six genera from the clothing of the game-guard. The larvae of A. hebraeum and Boophilus decoloratus were the most numerous of the immature ticks, and H. leachi and R. simus of the adults on both the vegetation and the guard’s clothing. Ticks fed on the field-worker on six occasions and 14 were collected, all of which were A. hebraeum larvae.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2010
Jennifer C. McClure; Michelle L. Crothers; John J. Schaefer; Patrick D. Stanley; Glen R. Needham; S. A. Ewing; Roger W. Stich
ABSTRACT Doxycycline is the treatment of choice for canine monocytic ehrlichiosis (CME), a well-characterized disease and valuable model for tick-borne zoonoses. Conflicting reports of clearance of Ehrlichia canis after treatment with doxycycline suggested that the disease phase during which treatment is initiated influences outcomes of these treatments. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of a 28-day doxycycline regimen for clearance of experimental E. canis infections from dogs treated during three phases of the disease. Ten dogs were inoculated with blood from E. canis carriers and treated with doxycycline during acute, subclinical, or chronic phases of CME. Daily rectal temperatures and semiweekly blood samples were monitored from each dog, and Rhipicephalus sanguineus ticks were acquisition fed on each dog for xenodiagnosis. Blood collected from dogs treated during acute or subclinical CME became PCR negative for E. canis as clinical parameters improved, but blood samples collected from dogs treated during chronic CME remained intermittently PCR positive. R. sanguineus ticks fed on dogs after doxycycline treatments became PCR positive for E. canis, regardless of when treatment was initiated. However, fewer ticks became PCR positive after feeding on two persistently infected dogs treated with doxycycline followed by rifampin, suggesting that antibiotic therapy can reduce tick acquisition of E. canis.
Physiological Entomology | 1996
Charles S. Burks; Richard L. Stewart; Glen R. Needham; Richard E. Lee
Abstract. Supercooling points and chill tolerance were compared among nymphs and adults of the ixodid ticks Dermacentor variabilis, Amblyomma americanum and Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae).Supercooling points in the range of <‐22 to ‐18°C were observed for nymphs, and ‐22 to ‐8°C for adults.The lower lethal temperatures observed under dry conditions, ‐14 to ‐10°C, were warmer than the supercooling points, but still much colder than ‐4.8°C, the lowest temperature recorded from a likely tick habitat in southwestern Ohio.Based on our experiments, spontaneous freezing and direct chilling injury are not significant mortality factors in these species in the field.Mortality was observed between ‐5 and ‐3°C for A.americanum and D.variabilis nymphs chilled for 2 h while in direct contact with ice.This mortality is probably due to inoculative freezing.Given the requirement for a rather humid microhabitat for off‐host survival, these findings suggest that inoculative freezing is an important cause of overwintering mortality in these medically important species.
Experimental Parasitology | 1990
Deborah C. Jaworski; Mark T. Muller; Frank A. Simmen; Glen R. Needham
Salivary gland antigens involved in host resistance to tick feeding by Amblyomma americanum (lone star tick) have been identified. Gland extracts from unfed and partially fed 12-, 48-, 72-, 96-, and 120-hr females and their corresponding midgut tissues were analyzed by immunoblotting with sera from naturally immune and hyperimmune sheep and rabbits. Polypeptides at 90, 75, 58, 45, 33, and 23 kDa from the salivary glands of A. americanum females were consistently observed with antibodies from both sheep and rabbits. No antigens unique to tick midgut tissue were detected with immune sera. Female Dermacentor variabilis and Ixodes dammini shared 90- and 45-kDa salivary gland antigens with A. americanum, and these may represent conserved polypeptides. We speculate that some of the salivary gland antigens represent components of tick cement, while others are playing some other yet undetermined role in tick feeding.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine | 1998
Richard L. Stewart; Willy Burgdorfer; Glen R. Needham
OBJECTIVE To evaluate three commercially available tick removal tools against medium-tipped nontissue tweezers. METHODS We evaluated three commercially available tick removal tools against medium-tipped tweezers. Three inexperienced users randomly removed attached American dog ticks (Dermacentor variabilis Say) and lone star ticks (Amblyomma americanum L.) from laboratory rabbits in a university animal facility using all tools during one removal session. RESULTS Tick damage occurring from removal and quantity of attachment cement were compared. No tool removed nymphs without damage and all tools removed adults of both species successfully. American dog ticks proved easier to remove than lone star ticks, whose mouthparts often remained in the skin. CONCLUSIONS Nymphal ticks were consistently removed more successfully with commercial tools when compared with tweezers but with more difficulty than adults were removed. The commercial tick removal tools tested are functional for removal of nymphs and adults and should be considered as viable alternatives to medium-tipped tweezers.
Journal of Insect Physiology | 1997
Jay A. Yoder; Mohamed E Selim; Glen R. Needham
To determine whether there is a correlation between the amount of lipids on the surface of ticks and their permeability to water, we quantified cuticular surface wax and measured water-loss rates in the ixodid tick Amblyomma americanum from nonfed nymph to egg-laying female. Ticks deposited no extra cuticular lipids during feeding, permitting maximum transpiratory water loss that presumably helps to concentrate the bloodmeal; and ticks deposited additional cuticular wax after apolysis that reduced integumental water loss, which likely prepares ticks for off-host existence. A remarkable three-fold boost in surface wax deposition and extreme water retention were noted after host drop-off following feeding. This wax is likely host-derived. Fed nymphs could discriminate between low and high relative humidity, enabling pharate adults to conserve lipid that would otherwise be lost with the exuvia and feces. This conservation strategy likely adds to the lipid pool needed by the tick to survive in a dry environment and complements the ticks behavioral abilities for seeking out optimum conditions for water conservation and host location.
Archive | 1998
Emmett V. Glass; Jay A. Yoder; Glen R. Needham
We investigated male clustering behaviour in large bulk cultures of the American house dust mite, Dermatophagoides farinae. Aggregation in the colony was restricted to males only. The water loss rates for individual males in isolation and as a group of six were determined. Males in a group of six retained water nearly twice as effectively (they had lower rates of net water loss) than individuals. Clustering is thus an adaptive behaviour to help reduce water loss. Because the clustering response was observed exclusively by males, this behaviour may serve an additional purpose that involves a pheromone system.