Jehan Zeb , Baolin Song , Munsif Ali Khan , Haytham Senbill , Muhammad Umair Aziz , Sabir Hussain , Adrian Alberto Díaz Sánchez , Alejandro Cabezas-Cruz , Abdulrahman Alzahrani , Mohammed Alshehri , Rashed Mohammed Alghamdi , Olivier Andre Sparagano
{"title":"从巴基斯坦北部小反刍动物身上采集的伊科蜱中蜱传人畜共患病原体的遗传多样性。","authors":"Jehan Zeb , Baolin Song , Munsif Ali Khan , Haytham Senbill , Muhammad Umair Aziz , Sabir Hussain , Adrian Alberto Díaz Sánchez , Alejandro Cabezas-Cruz , Abdulrahman Alzahrani , Mohammed Alshehri , Rashed Mohammed Alghamdi , Olivier Andre Sparagano","doi":"10.1016/j.meegid.2024.105663","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>Mapping tick distribution and pathogens in unexplored areas sheds light on their importance in zoonotic and veterinary contexts. In this study, we performed a comprehensive investigation of the genetic diversity of tick and tick-borne pathogens (TBPs) detection infesting/infecting small ruminants across northern Pakistan. We collected 1587 ixodid ticks from 600 goats and sheep, an overall tick infestation rate of 50.2 %. Notably, gender-based infestation rates were higher in female goats and sheep compared to their male counterparts. Age-wise analysis showed that the tick infestation rate was higher in older animals. This study identified 11 ixodid tick species within three genera: <em>Hyalomma</em>, <em>Haemaphysalis</em>, and <em>Rhipicephalus</em>, which were taxonomically classified using <em>16S rRNA</em> and cytochrome oxidase I <em>(cox1)</em> molecular markers. Sequence analysis indicated that reported ticks are similar to ixodid species found across various Asian and African countries. Tick-borne pathogens were detected by amplifying <em>16S rRNA</em> and citrate synthase (<em>gltA</em>) for bacterial pathogens and 18S rRNA for apicomplexan parasites. The present study reported a diverse array of TBPs in ticks from the study area, with <em>Rickettsia massiliae</em> (24.5 %) and <em>Theleria ovis</em> (16.4 %) as the most prevalent bacterial and apicomplexan pathogens. Phylogenetically, detected TBPs shared evolutionary relatedness with identical TBPs from old and new world countries. These findings highlight the presence of zoonotic TBPs in ixodid ticks from Pakistan. In addition, it also provides a foundation for future epidemiological research on ticks and TBPs, emphasizing their relevance in both zoonotic and veterinary contexts.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":54986,"journal":{"name":"Infection Genetics and Evolution","volume":"124 ","pages":"Article 105663"},"PeriodicalIF":2.6000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S156713482400114X/pdfft?md5=d1d2bcbcaf74a6bb3a37e34a38fe167b&pid=1-s2.0-S156713482400114X-main.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Genetic diversity of tick-borne zoonotic pathogens in ixodid ticks collected from small ruminants in Northern Pakistan\",\"authors\":\"Jehan Zeb , Baolin Song , Munsif Ali Khan , Haytham Senbill , Muhammad Umair Aziz , Sabir Hussain , Adrian Alberto Díaz Sánchez , Alejandro Cabezas-Cruz , Abdulrahman Alzahrani , Mohammed Alshehri , Rashed Mohammed Alghamdi , Olivier Andre Sparagano\",\"doi\":\"10.1016/j.meegid.2024.105663\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<div><p>Mapping tick distribution and pathogens in unexplored areas sheds light on their importance in zoonotic and veterinary contexts. In this study, we performed a comprehensive investigation of the genetic diversity of tick and tick-borne pathogens (TBPs) detection infesting/infecting small ruminants across northern Pakistan. We collected 1587 ixodid ticks from 600 goats and sheep, an overall tick infestation rate of 50.2 %. Notably, gender-based infestation rates were higher in female goats and sheep compared to their male counterparts. Age-wise analysis showed that the tick infestation rate was higher in older animals. This study identified 11 ixodid tick species within three genera: <em>Hyalomma</em>, <em>Haemaphysalis</em>, and <em>Rhipicephalus</em>, which were taxonomically classified using <em>16S rRNA</em> and cytochrome oxidase I <em>(cox1)</em> molecular markers. Sequence analysis indicated that reported ticks are similar to ixodid species found across various Asian and African countries. Tick-borne pathogens were detected by amplifying <em>16S rRNA</em> and citrate synthase (<em>gltA</em>) for bacterial pathogens and 18S rRNA for apicomplexan parasites. The present study reported a diverse array of TBPs in ticks from the study area, with <em>Rickettsia massiliae</em> (24.5 %) and <em>Theleria ovis</em> (16.4 %) as the most prevalent bacterial and apicomplexan pathogens. Phylogenetically, detected TBPs shared evolutionary relatedness with identical TBPs from old and new world countries. These findings highlight the presence of zoonotic TBPs in ixodid ticks from Pakistan. 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Genetic diversity of tick-borne zoonotic pathogens in ixodid ticks collected from small ruminants in Northern Pakistan
Mapping tick distribution and pathogens in unexplored areas sheds light on their importance in zoonotic and veterinary contexts. In this study, we performed a comprehensive investigation of the genetic diversity of tick and tick-borne pathogens (TBPs) detection infesting/infecting small ruminants across northern Pakistan. We collected 1587 ixodid ticks from 600 goats and sheep, an overall tick infestation rate of 50.2 %. Notably, gender-based infestation rates were higher in female goats and sheep compared to their male counterparts. Age-wise analysis showed that the tick infestation rate was higher in older animals. This study identified 11 ixodid tick species within three genera: Hyalomma, Haemaphysalis, and Rhipicephalus, which were taxonomically classified using 16S rRNA and cytochrome oxidase I (cox1) molecular markers. Sequence analysis indicated that reported ticks are similar to ixodid species found across various Asian and African countries. Tick-borne pathogens were detected by amplifying 16S rRNA and citrate synthase (gltA) for bacterial pathogens and 18S rRNA for apicomplexan parasites. The present study reported a diverse array of TBPs in ticks from the study area, with Rickettsia massiliae (24.5 %) and Theleria ovis (16.4 %) as the most prevalent bacterial and apicomplexan pathogens. Phylogenetically, detected TBPs shared evolutionary relatedness with identical TBPs from old and new world countries. These findings highlight the presence of zoonotic TBPs in ixodid ticks from Pakistan. In addition, it also provides a foundation for future epidemiological research on ticks and TBPs, emphasizing their relevance in both zoonotic and veterinary contexts.
期刊介绍:
(aka Journal of Molecular Epidemiology and Evolutionary Genetics of Infectious Diseases -- MEEGID)
Infectious diseases constitute one of the main challenges to medical science in the coming century. The impressive development of molecular megatechnologies and of bioinformatics have greatly increased our knowledge of the evolution, transmission and pathogenicity of infectious diseases. Research has shown that host susceptibility to many infectious diseases has a genetic basis. Furthermore, much is now known on the molecular epidemiology, evolution and virulence of pathogenic agents, as well as their resistance to drugs, vaccines, and antibiotics. Equally, research on the genetics of disease vectors has greatly improved our understanding of their systematics, has increased our capacity to identify target populations for control or intervention, and has provided detailed information on the mechanisms of insecticide resistance.
However, the genetics and evolutionary biology of hosts, pathogens and vectors have tended to develop as three separate fields of research. This artificial compartmentalisation is of concern due to our growing appreciation of the strong co-evolutionary interactions among hosts, pathogens and vectors.
Infection, Genetics and Evolution and its companion congress [MEEGID](http://www.meegidconference.com/) (for Molecular Epidemiology and Evolutionary Genetics of Infectious Diseases) are the main forum acting for the cross-fertilization between evolutionary science and biomedical research on infectious diseases.
Infection, Genetics and Evolution is the only journal that welcomes articles dealing with the genetics and evolutionary biology of hosts, pathogens and vectors, and coevolution processes among them in relation to infection and disease manifestation. All infectious models enter the scope of the journal, including pathogens of humans, animals and plants, either parasites, fungi, bacteria, viruses or prions. The journal welcomes articles dealing with genetics, population genetics, genomics, postgenomics, gene expression, evolutionary biology, population dynamics, mathematical modeling and bioinformatics. We also provide many author benefits, such as free PDFs, a liberal copyright policy, special discounts on Elsevier publications and much more. Please click here for more information on our author services .