Diversity of bartonellae in mites (Acari: Mesostigmata: Macronyssidae and Spinturnicidae) of boreal forest bats: Association of host specificity of mites and habitat selection of hosts with vector potential.

IF 1.6 3区 农林科学 Q2 ENTOMOLOGY Medical and Veterinary Entomology Pub Date : 2024-08-22 DOI:10.1111/mve.12757
Attila D Sándor, Alexandra Corduneanu, Maria Orlova, Sándor Hornok, Alejandro Cabezas-Cruz, Angélique Foucault-Simonin, Joanna Kulisz, Zbigniew Zając, Mihai Borzan
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Abstract

Research into various bacterial pathogens that can be transmitted between different animals and may have zoonotic potential has led to the discovery of different strains of Bartonella sp. in bats and their associated ectoparasites. Despite their enormous species diversity, only a few studies have focussed on the detection of bacterial pathogens in insectivorous bats of boreal forests and their associated Macronyssidae and Spinturnicidae mites. We collected and molecularly analysed mite samples from forest-dwelling bat species distributed all along the boreal belt of the Palearctic, from Central Europe to Far East. Ectoparasitic mites were pooled for DNA extraction and DNA amplification polymerase chain reaction (PCRs) were conducted to detect the presence of various bacterial (Anaplasmataceae, Bartonella sp., Rickettsia sp., Mycoplasma sp.) and protozoal (Hepatozoon sp.) pathogens. Bartonella sp. DNA was detected in four different mite species (Macronyssidae: Steatonyssus periblepharus and Spinturnicidae: Spinturnix acuminata, Sp. myoti and Sp. mystacinus), with different prevalences of the targeted gene (gltA, 16-23S ribosomal RNA intergenic spacer and ftsZ). Larger pools (>5 samples pooled) were more likely to harbour Bartonella sp. DNA, than smaller ones. In addition, cave-dwelling bat hosts and host generalist mite species are more associated with Bartonella spp. presence. Spinturnicidae mites may transmit several distinct Bartonella strains, which cluster phylogenetically close to Bartonella species known to cause diseases in humans and livestock. Mites with ubiquitous presence may facilitate the long-term maintenance (and even local recurrence) of Bartonella-infestations inside local bat populations, thus acting as continuous reservoirs for Bartonella spp in bats.

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北方森林蝙蝠螨(Acari:Mesostigmata:Macronyssidae 和 Spinturnicidae)中巴氏杆菌的多样性:螨虫的宿主特异性和宿主的生境选择与病媒潜能的关联。
对可在不同动物间传播并可能造成人畜共患病的各种细菌病原体的研究,导致在蝙蝠及其相关的体外寄生虫中发现了不同的巴顿氏菌菌株。尽管蝙蝠的种类繁多,但只有少数研究集中于北方森林食虫蝙蝠及其相关的Macronyssidae和Spinturnicidae螨虫中细菌病原体的检测。我们收集了分布在从中欧到远东的古北区北方地带的森林栖息蝙蝠物种的螨虫样本,并对其进行了分子分析。外寄生螨被集中起来提取DNA,并进行DNA扩增聚合酶链反应(PCR),以检测各种细菌(无形体科、巴顿氏菌属、立克次体属、支原体属)和原生动物(肝包虫属)病原体的存在。在四种不同的螨类中(Macronyssidae:Steatonyssus periblepharus 和 Spinturnicidae:Spinturnix acuminata、Sp. myoti 和 Sp. mystacinus)检测到了巴顿氏菌 DNA,目标基因(gltA、16-23S 核糖体 RNA 基因间间隔和 ftsZ)的流行率各不相同。与较小的样本池相比,较大的样本池(大于 5 个样本池)更有可能携带巴顿氏菌 DNA。此外,穴居蝙蝠宿主和宿主通性螨类与巴顿氏菌属的存在更有关联。Spinturnicidae 螨虫可能传播几种不同的巴顿氏菌菌株,这些菌株在系统发育上与已知可导致人类和家畜疾病的巴顿氏菌菌株相近。无处不在的螨虫可能会促使巴顿氏菌感染在当地蝙蝠种群中长期维持(甚至局部复发),从而成为蝙蝠中巴顿氏菌属的持续贮藏库。
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来源期刊
Medical and Veterinary Entomology
Medical and Veterinary Entomology 农林科学-昆虫学
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
5.30%
发文量
65
审稿时长
12-24 weeks
期刊介绍: Medical and Veterinary Entomology is the leading periodical in its field. The Journal covers the biology and control of insects, ticks, mites and other arthropods of medical and veterinary importance. The main strengths of the Journal lie in the fields of: -epidemiology and transmission of vector-borne pathogens changes in vector distribution that have impact on the pathogen transmission- arthropod behaviour and ecology- novel, field evaluated, approaches to biological and chemical control methods- host arthropod interactions. Please note that we do not consider submissions in forensic entomology.
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