![Show Menu](styles/mobile-menu.png)
![Page Background](./../common/page-substrates/page0068.png)
Draft, Do Not Distribute
8 Draft SMPR Coxiella burnetii v7
•
DNA from higher eukaryotes
218
Plants
219
Zea mays
(corn)
220
Pollen from
Pinus
spp. (pine)
221
Cotton
4222
223
Arthropods
224
Aedes aegypti
(ATCC /CCL-125 mosquito cell line)
225
Aedes albopictus
(Mosquito C6/36 cell line)
226
Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus
(Dust mite -commercial source)
227
Xenopsylla cheopis
Flea (Rocky Mountain labs)
228
Drosophilia
cell line
229
Musca domestica
(housefly) ARS, USDA, Fargo, ND
230
Gypsy moth cell lines LED652Y cell line (baculovirus)– Invitrogen
231
Cockroach (commercial source)
232
Tick (Amblyomma)
233
234
Vertebrates
235
Mus musculus
(ATCC/HB-123) mouse
236
Rattus norvegicus
(ATCC/CRL-1896) rat
237
Canis familiaris
(ATCC/CCL-183) dog
238
Felis catus
(ATCC/CRL-8727) cat
239
Homo sapiens
(HeLa cell line ATCC/CCL-2) human
240
Gallus gallus domesticus
(Chicken)
241
Goat
5242
243
•
Biological insecticides
– Strains of
B. thuringiensis
present in commercially available
244
insecticides have been extensively used in hoaxes and are likely to be harvested in
245
air collectors. For these reasons, it should be used to assess the specificity of these
246
threat assays.
247
248
B. thuringiensis
subsp
. israelensis
249
B. thuringiensis
subsp
. kurstaki
250
B. thuringiensis
subsp
. morrisoni
251
Serenade (Fungicide)
B. subtilis
(QST713)
252
253
Viral agents have also been used for insect control. Two representative products
254
are:
255
256
Gypcheck for gypsy moths (
Lymanteria dispar
nuclear polyhedrosis virus)
257
258
Cyd-X for coddling moths (Coddling moth granulosis virus)
259
260
261
262
263
4
Removed by C. burnetii WG on 4/23/2015 due to unavailability.
5
Specific to C. burnetii; added by CB WG on 4/23/2015.