猫蚤合并感染猫立克次体和伤寒立克次体。

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES Vector borne and zoonotic diseases Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2024-03-01 DOI:10.1089/vbz.2023.0122
Hanna J Laukaitis-Yousey, Kevin R Macaluso
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:由跳蚤传播的立克次体病(病原体为猫立克次体、伤寒立克次体和RFLOs(类猫立克次体)的统称)已成为全世界,特别是美国的一个公共卫生问题。由于有共同的节肢动物媒介(猫蚤)和临床症状,因此很难区分立克次体的种类。虽然病媒中微生物共感染的影响可导致拮抗或协同的相互关系,从而改变人类潜在的接触机会和疾病,但跳蚤种群中细菌相互作用的影响仍未得到很好的界定。研究方法本研究利用体外和体内系统评估立克次体在节肢动物中的相互作用。结果在蜱源细胞系中同时感染鼠伤寒杆菌和鼠伤寒杆菌表明,这两种立克次体可以感染同一个细胞,但不同的生长动力学导致鼠伤寒杆菌的生长随着时间的推移而减少,与感染顺序无关。连续的跳蚤共感染表明,载体可以同时感染两种立克次体并维持共感染长达2周,但在共感染期间,共感染跳蚤和粪便中的立克次体载量会发生变化。结论共同感染期间立克次体载量的改变表明,鼠伤寒和鼠伤寒之间的相互作用可能会增强其中一种病原体的传播潜力。因此,这项研究为厘清病媒共感染期间复杂的种间关系所导致的传播事件提供了功能性基础。
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Cat Flea Coinfection with Rickettsia felis and Rickettsia typhi.

Purpose: Flea-borne rickettsioses, collectively referred to as a term for etiological agents Rickettsia felis, Rickettsia typhi, and RFLOs (R. felis-like organisms), has become a public health concern around the world, specifically in the United States. Due to a shared arthropod vector (the cat flea) and clinical signs, discriminating between Rickettsia species has proven difficult. While the effects of microbial coinfections in the vector can result in antagonistic or synergistic interrelationships, subsequently altering potential human exposure and disease, the impact of bacterial interactions within flea populations remains poorly defined. Methods: In this study, in vitro and in vivo systems were utilized to assess rickettsial interactions in arthropods. Results: Coinfection of both R. felis and R. typhi within a tick-derived cell line indicated that the two species could infect the same cell, but distinct growth kinetics led to reduced R. felis growth over time, regardless of infection order. Sequential flea coinfections revealed the vector could acquire both Rickettsia spp. and sustain coinfection for up to 2 weeks, but rickettsial loads in coinfected fleas and feces were altered during coinfection. Conclusion: Altered rickettsial loads during coinfection suggest R. felis and R. typhi interactions may enhance the transmission potential of either agent. Thus, this study provides a functional foundation to disentangle transmission events propelled by complex interspecies relationships during vector coinfections.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
4.80%
发文量
73
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases is an authoritative, peer-reviewed journal providing basic and applied research on diseases transmitted to humans by invertebrate vectors or non-human vertebrates. The Journal examines geographic, seasonal, and other risk factors that influence the transmission, diagnosis, management, and prevention of this group of infectious diseases, and identifies global trends that have the potential to result in major epidemics. Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases coverage includes: -Ecology -Entomology -Epidemiology -Infectious diseases -Microbiology -Parasitology -Pathology -Public health -Tropical medicine -Wildlife biology -Bacterial, rickettsial, viral, and parasitic zoonoses
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