With this methodology, a preliminary characterization of C. burnetii variants circulating in Spain has been performed showing a high variability of this organism in clinical and environmental settings, identifying 7 GG, with the exception of GG V, and 10 different GTs. In Spain, while a respiratory disease is observed in about 80% of cases reported from the Northern region of the Basque Country [26, 27], the Southern regions of Andalusia and the Canary Islands report
a clear predominance (about 90% of cases) of FID with liver involvement [28–34]. This last has also been described ZD1839 nmr in Australia, France, Greece, or Taiwan [35–38], among others. Even taking into account the limited size of this study and the constraint of an PR-171 nmr extrapolation, a strain-associated factor that might explain the different clinical presentations of acute Q fever is hypothesized for our country. The pattern observed in cases of acute Q fever indicates an association between absence of adaA and FID with liver involvement, Selleck JNK inhibitor produced in this study by adaA negative strains in both regions (the Southern regions of Andalusia and the Canary Islands), although is not statistically significant in this study (p = 0.09) due to low number of samples. Also, another sample of a case of hepatitis from the north (Basque Country) yielded an adaA
negative result as well. The same applies for the 2 reference isolates from hepatitis cases analyzed in this study: F2, a French isolate and SQ217, recovered in the USA from a case of chronic hepatitis, are both adaA negative as
well. In contrast, pneumonia predominates over liver involvement in Northern Spain, being the only case of this clinical form available for the study produced by an adaA positive strain. No other marker used in this study correlated with the clinical presentation of acute Q fever. Availability of samples from cases of acute Q fever for genotyping is much less frequent than from cases of chronic Q fever, even though acute Q fever is much more prevalent. In this study, 11 samples from acute cases were analyzed, although only one was from a case with respiratory symptoms, reflecting the limited availability of such samples, which may be from due to a poor clinical awareness. From the 10 GTs found in the country, only 5 have been detected in humans and, among them, GT IV- is the most frequently found in acute and chronic cases (75% of cases). This GT has also been found in many mammal species (sheep, goat, wild boar and rats). Whether this could be interpreted as a higher tendency of this GT to cause illness in humans can not be inferred by this study, mainly considering that most of the acute cases (8/11) came from the same area (Gran Canaria Island). In any case, GT IV- is highly prevalent also in our chronic cases that came from 8 distant areas of the country, showing a more intensive circulation of this GT in humans.