The maturation and quantification of Theileria lestoquardi
(T. hirci) parasites in unfed and partially fed adult Hyalomma
anatolicum anatolicum ticks was studied using (1) methyl green pyronin
(MGP) staining of salivary glands, (2) in vitro
infection of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBM) with parasites
harvested from infected ticks and (3) a semi-quantitative polymerase
chain reaction (PCR). With MGP staining the greatest infection rate was
seen in unfed ticks.
Feeding resulted in a gradual reduction in the number of infected acini
with a concomitant increase in the maturity of the
parasites. In vitro infection of sheep PBM with titrated ground-up
tick supernate (GUTS) demonstrated that infectivity
peaked between 2 and 4 days of tick feeding whereas GUTS prepared from
unfed ticks was not infective. The polymerase
chain reaction (PCR) was both sensitive and specific, detecting
T. lestoquardi DNA in unfed and partially fed ticks, with
a maximum sensitivity of 0·022 infected acinus/tick in 2-day
fed ticks, though it gave no indication of the infectivity of the parasite.