蜱虫暴露生物标志物:新蜱虫监测工具的 "一体健康 "方法

Alexis Dziedziech , Eva Krupa , Kristina E.M. Persson , Richard Paul , Sarah Bonnet
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摘要

受气候变化和社会经济变化的影响,蜱传疾病(TBD)的传播在全球范围内不断升级,这凸显了改进监测、诊断和控制策略的紧迫性。蜱虫可传播一系列病原体,增加了莱姆病、蜱传脑炎、蜱虫病、无形体病或克里米亚-刚果出血热等人类和兽医疾病的传播风险。监测方法在监控蜱媒病原体(TBP)传播方面发挥着至关重要的作用。然而,目前有关蜱虫风险的监测方法存在不足之处。人类与蜱虫的相遇为疾病风险评估提供了一种新的衡量标准,将人类行为融入到传统的监测模型中。然而,为了更可靠地测量蜱虫接触情况,需要一种分子标记物。将节肢动物唾液蛋白抗体鉴定为病媒接触的生物标记物,是加强现有诊断和监测指标的一个很有前景的途径。在此,我们将探讨如何使用以重组蛋白和合成肽为目标的蜱唾液生物标记物来显著改善结核病传播风险评估和病媒控制措施的有效性。通过集中努力创造一种适用于人类和家畜的蜱虫暴露生物标志物,蜱虫监测、诊断和控制将更容易实现,并有助于从 "一体健康 "的角度减少日益严重的结核病威胁。
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Tick exposure biomarkers: A One Health approach to new tick surveillance tools

The spread of tick-borne disease (TBD) is escalating globally, driven by climate change and socio-economic shifts, underlining the urgency to improve surveillance, diagnostics, and control strategies. Ticks can transmit a range of pathogens increasing the risk of transmission of human and veterinary diseases such as Lyme disease, tick-borne encephalitis, theileriosis, anaplasmosis, or Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever. Surveillance methods play a crucial role in monitoring the spread of tick-borne pathogens (TBP). However, there are shortcomings in the current surveillance methods regarding risks related to ticks. Human-tick encounters offer a novel metric for disease risk assessment, integrating human behavior into traditional surveillance models. However, to more reliably measure tick exposure, a molecular marker is needed. The identification of antibodies against arthropod salivary proteins as biomarkers for vector exposure represents a promising avenue for enhancing existing diagnostic and surveillance metrics. Here we explore how the use of tick saliva biomarkers targeting recombinant proteins and synthetic peptides could significantly improve the assessment of TBD transmission risk and the effectiveness of vector control measures. With focused efforts on creating a biomarker against tick exposure suitable for humans and domestic animals alike, tick surveillance, diagnosis and control would be more achievable and aid in reducing the mounting threat of TBP through a One Health lens.

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