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Studies on Neotropical Fauna and Environment | 1993

Rodent abundance and distribution in habitats of Agrocenosis in Argentina

Jaime J. Polop; Marta S. Sabattini

Physiographical and environmental factors have important effects on the distribution and abundance of small mammals. The purpose of this paper is to examine the spatial and seasonal distribution of cricetid populations on a selected part of the agrocenosis in Laguna Larga, Cordoba, Argentina. Four habitats were selected: wood, cultivated field, wood border, and cultivated field border. Trapping in all habitats consisted of trap line transects during fall and spring each year from 1979 to 1981. Five cricetid species were trapped in a total of 1285 captures in all four habitats. Calomys musculinus was the most abundant species. No differences in population number were obtained with respect to habitat, season or year. On the other hand, Calomys laucha showed differences in capture frequency between habitats and between years. Populations of Akodon dolores and Calomys venustus were not significantly different with respect to habitat, but A. dolores revealed seasonal differences. Graomys griseoflavus was captu...


Biochemical Genetics | 1980

Enzyme polymorphism in a population of Calomys musculinus (Rodentia, Cricetidae).

Cristina N. Gardenal; Marta S. Sabattini; Antonio Blanco

NAD-linked lactate, malate, glycerophosphate, alcohol and nonspecific dehydrogenases, aspartate aminotransferases, and soluble esterases from extracts of tissues of individuals from a wild population of Calomys musculinus (Rodentia, Cricetidae) have been analyzed by means of starch gel electrophoresis and specific staining. Allelic frequencies and heterozygosity have been determined. Mendelian inheritance of some of the variants detected was confirmed by breeding experiments. Ten out of fifteen (66.6%) of the genetic loci investigated presented polymorphism. Mean heterozygosity per locus was very high (H=0.2014, se 0.046).


Genetica | 1990

Protein polymorphism and genetic distance in South American cricetid rodents of the genus Calomys

Cristina N. Gardenal; Beatriz A. García; Marta S. Sabattini; Antonio Blanco

Allozymic variation in population samples of Calomys laucha, C. musculinus and C. venustus collected simultaneously from the province of Córdoba, Argentina, was analyzed by gel electrophoresis. These three species showed high levels of polymorphism: for C. laucha, the P value was 72.7% and the H value was 0.147 (19 loci); for C. musculinus, P=61.9% and H=0.149 (20 loci); for C. venustus, P=66.7% and H=0.146 (18 loci). These species are non-fossorial generalists, have a high reproductive rate and live in disturbed habitats. The similarity indices (S) range between 0.613 and 0.681. On the basis of genetic distance, D (between 0.354 and 0.476), divergence time was estimated to be from 6.3 to 8.5 million years (late Miocene). Even admitting some imprecision for this estimate, the remarkable differences at the structural gene level shown by the species analyzed, suggest they had an early origin.


Journal of Virological Methods | 2002

Evaluation of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for detection of antibodies to Junin virus in rodents

María Alejandra Morales; Gladys E. Calderón; Laura Riera; Ana M. Ambrosio; Delia Enria; Marta S. Sabattini

Junin virus is the etiological agent of Argentine hemorrhagic fever, a serious rodent-borne disease. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to detect Junin virus IgG antibodies in rodents was evaluated using sera from 27 Calomys musculinus and five Calomys laucha, inoculated experimentally with a live attenuated strain of this arenavirus. The test performance was compared against an indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA). The ELISA had a sensitivity and specificity of 100% and a reproducibility of 87.9% for samples with titers above the selected cut-off value. IFA had lower sensitivity (53%) with the same specificity. The ELISA results were similar, whether carried out on whole blood or serum samples, thus eliminating the need for serum separation. A high correlation (K=0.86) between ELISA and IFA results was obtained from 1011 wild sigmodontine and murine rodents collected within and outside of the Argentine hemorrhagic fever endemic area. These results indicate that Junin virus IgG ELISA is the most suitable assay for detection of Junin virus antibodies in rodent samples.


Intervirology | 1979

Presence of viral particles in the salivary gland of Calomys musculinus infected with Junin virus by a natural route.

Liliana A. Martínez Peralta; Ruben P. Laguens; Patricio M. Cossio; Marta S. Sabattini; Julio I. Maiztegui; Roberto M. Arana

Calomys musculinus, a wild cricetid rodent, is one of the main reservoirs of Junin virus. Six of these animals were infected by being placed in close contact with animals that had been experimentally infected with the virus. They were sacrificed at 10, 15 and 20 months after contact, and their salivary glands were studied by ultrastructural, immunohistochemical and virological methods. Two animals developed chronic viremia and low titers of complement-fixing antibodies. These animals were the only ones that had high viral titers in salivary glands and blood and viral antigen and particles in salivary glands. Although some of the other animals had viremia at the beginning of the experiment, it was absent 5 months later. Complement-fixing antibodies developed in all animals. On the basis of these findings, we assumed that the salivary gland is an important site of viral synthesis and excretion. This type of chronic infection, with persistent viremia and virus shedding, is possibly important for virus perpetuation in nature and transmission to man.


Genetica | 2002

Gene Flow Among Calomys Musculinus (Rodentia, Muridae) Populations in Argentina

Marina B. Chiappero; Marta S. Sabattini; Antonio Blanco; Gladys E. Calderón; Cristina N. Gardenal

Calomys musculinus is a Sigmodontinae rodent inhabiting periodically disturbed habitats in the central eastern plains of Argentina. It is the natural reservoir host of Junin virus, the etiological agent of Argentine Hemorrhagic Fever (AHF). In order to analyze the levels of gene flow among populations of this species, allozymic variability at 26 loci was studied in 291 individuals from the endemic zone of AHF and localities outside it. All populations showed high levels of polymorphism (He between 0.107 and 0.144; P95% between 38 and 54%). Individual loci f values were in most cases negative, although not significantly different from zero. Mean genetic differentiation among populations was low, but statistically significant (Θ = 0.020; P < 0.01). There was no correlation between genetic and geographic distances between pairs of populations, and scatter of the pairwise points suggests that, at the regional scale, genetic drift is more influential than gene flow. This result can be interpreted as indicative of a relatively recent expansion of C. musculinus habitat and restricted on-going gene flow, which would be compatible with a relatively slow expansion rate of AHF.


Research in Virology | 1992

Experimental neuroinvasiveness of wild and laboratory junin virus strains

Silvia Medeot; Marta Silvia Contigiani; Marta S. Sabattini; G. Diaz

The neuroinvasiveness of Candid 1 and XJCL3 laboratory strains and CbalV4454 and CbaFHA5069 wild strains of Junin virus was studied in albino mice, guinea pigs, and a South American wild rodent, Calomys musculinus (Cm), of different ages inoculated by a non-neural route. Infectivity in brain, blood and organs, as well as lethality, were determined. The results with the 3 hosts indicate that Junin virus neuroinvasiveness is virus-strain-dependent, host species- and age-dependent, with the Candid 1 strain proving to be the least neuroinvasive of the strains studied. The lethal efficiency index (log PFU/LD50) in 2-day old albino mice and the neuroinvasiveness index (Log PFU/ND50) in 6 +/- 1 day-old Cm of the various strains using the intraperitoneal (ip) route could therefore be useful markers of Junin virus neuroinvasiveness. Moreover, different patterns of infection were established using the results of the presence of infectious virus in brain and viraemia in the 3 hosts. In nearly all cases, virus neuroinvasion was present without detectable viraemia (virus in plasma). Current evidence leads to the assumption that virus might reach the brain associated with the white cells in blood (undetectable by conventional isolation methods) or by another possible mechanism of neuroinvasion which is not haematogenous.


Biochemical Systematics and Ecology | 2002

Genetic structure of populations of Calomys laucha (muridae, sigmodontinae) from central Argentina

Marina B. Chiappero; Antonio Blanco; Gladys E. Calderón; Marta S. Sabattini; Cristina N. Gardenal

Abstract The genetic structure of populations of the Sigmodontinae rodent Calomys laucha was studied by means of allozyme electrophoresis. This highly opportunistic species is found preferably in periodically perturbed habitats of crop fields in central Argentina, where it can attain very high densities. A total of 17 enzymatic proteins assayed gave information on 25 loci; only four were monomorphic in the seven populations studied. Levels of genetic variability (H o from 0.144 to 0.171; P 95% from 44% to 56%) were higher than mean values reported for mammals and rodents. These high levels of heterozygosity could be maintained by large populations that do not experience great fluctuations in size, or by a social structure consistent in many small breeding groups that are formed and dissappear every breeding season. Genetic differentiation at a macrogeographical scale (θ=0.018) was low but statistically significant, and showed no correlation with geographic distance between pairs of populations. The pattern of population differentiation found is compatible with a relatively recent range expansion.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 1999

Dengue Reemergence in Argentina

Gabriela Aviles; Griselda Rangeon; V. Vorndam; A. Briones; Pablo Baroni; Delia Enria; Marta S. Sabattini


Archive | 1998

Historical, Epidemiological and Ecological Aspects of Arboviruses in Argentina: Flaviviridae, Bunyaviridae and Rhabdoviridae

Marta S. Sabattini; Gabriela Aviles; Thomas O Monath

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Cristina N. Gardenal

National University of Cordoba

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Antonio Blanco

National University of Cordoba

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Marta Silvia Contigiani

National University of Cordoba

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Jaime Polop

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Marina B. Chiappero

National University of Cordoba

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Silvia Medeot

National University of Cordoba

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Thomas P. Monath

United States Department of Health and Human Services

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