Haemaphysalis longicornis (Acari: Ixodidae) does not transmit Babesia bovis, a causative agent of cattle fever

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Karen C. Poh , Mitzi Aguilar , Janaína Capelli-Peixoto , Sara K. Davis , Massaro W. Ueti
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Abstract

The Asian longhorned tick (Haemaphysalis longicornis) was first reported in the United States in 2017 and has since been detected in at least 17 states. This tick infests cattle and can produce large populations quickly due to its parthenogenetic nature, leading to significant livestock mortalities and economic losses. While H. longicornis has not been detected in Texas, species distribution models have identified southern Texas as a possible hospitable region for this tick. Southern Texas is currently home to the southern cattle tick (Rhipicephalus microplus), which can transmit the causative agent of cattle fever (Babesia bovis). With the potential for H. longicornis and B. bovis to overlap in southern Texas and their potential to negatively impact the national and global livestock industry, it is imperative to identify the role H. longicornis may play in the cattle fever disease system. A controlled acquisition and transmission experiment tested whether H. longicornis is a vector for B. bovis, with the R. microplus-B. bovis system used as a positive control. Transstadial (nymphs to adults) and transovarial (adults to larvae) transmission and subsequent transstadial maintenance (nymphs and adults) routes were tested in this study. Acquisition-fed, splenectomized animals were used to increase the probability of tick infection. Acquisition nymphs were macerated whole and acquisition adults were dissected to remove midguts and ovaries at five time points (4, 6, 8, 10, and 12 days post-repletion), with 40 ticks processed per time point and life stage. The greatest percentage of nymphs with detectable B. bovis DNA occurred six days post-repletion (20.0 %). For adults, the percentage of positive midguts and ovaries increased as days post-repletion progressed, with day 12 having the highest percentage of positive samples (67.5 % and 60.0 %, respectively). When egg batches were tested in triplicate, all H. longicornis egg batches were negative for B. bovis, while all R. microplus egg batches were positive for B. bovis. During the transmission phase, the subsequent life stages for transstadial (adults) and transovarial transmission/transstadial maintenance (larvae, nymphs, and adults) were fed on naïve, splenectomized calves. All life stages of H. longicornis ticks tested during transmission were negative for B. bovis. Furthermore, the transmission fed animals were also negative for B. bovis and did not show signs of bovine babesiosis during the 45-day post tick transmission period. Given the lack of successful transstadial or transovarial transmission, it is unlikely that H. longicornis is a vector for B. bovis.

Haemaphysalis longicornis (Acari: Ixodidae)不会传播牛瘟的病原体牛巴贝斯虫
2017 年,美国首次报告了亚洲长角蜱(Haemaphysalis longicornis),此后至少在 17 个州发现了这种蜱虫。这种蜱虫侵扰牛群,由于其孤雌生殖的特性,可以迅速产生大量种群,导致牲畜大量死亡和经济损失。虽然德克萨斯州尚未发现 H. longicornis,但物种分布模型已确定德克萨斯州南部可能是这种蜱虫的好客地区。得克萨斯州南部目前是南方牛蜱(Rhipicephalus microplus)的栖息地,而南方牛蜱可传播牛热病的病原体(Babesia bovis)。由于长角蜱和牛巴贝斯虫有可能在得克萨斯州南部重叠,并有可能对全国和全球畜牧业造成负面影响,因此必须确定长角蜱在牛热病系统中可能扮演的角色。一项受控的获取和传播实验测试了长角尾角蜥是否是牛海绵状芽孢杆菌的病媒,并将 R. microplus-B. bovis 系统作为阳性对照。该研究测试了经垫状(若虫到成虫)和经虫状(成虫到幼虫)传播以及随后的经垫状维持(若虫和成虫)途径。为了增加蜱虫感染的几率,我们使用了采食并切除脾脏的动物。在五个时间点(补饲后 4、6、8、10 和 12 天),采集的若虫被整个浸渍,采集的成虫被解剖以去除中肠和卵巢,每个时间点和生命阶段处理 40 只蜱。在补饲后 6 天的若虫中,可检测到牛杆菌 DNA 的若虫比例最高(20.0%)。对于成虫,阳性中肠和卵巢的比例随着补体后天数的增加而增加,其中第 12 天的阳性样本比例最高(分别为 67.5 % 和 60.0 %)。在对一式三份的卵批次进行检测时,所有长角雉卵批次对牛杆菌均呈阴性,而所有小尾寒羊卵批次对牛杆菌均呈阳性。在传播阶段,转座期(成虫)和经虫传播/转座期维持(幼虫、若虫和成虫)的后续生命阶段都喂养了未受感染的、切除脾脏的小牛。在传播过程中检测的所有生命阶段的长角蜱对牛杆菌均呈阴性。此外,在蜱传播后的 45 天内,喂食传播动物的牛巴贝斯虫也呈阴性,没有出现牛巴贝斯虫病的症状。鉴于没有成功的经肛门或经疟疾传播,长角蜱不太可能是牛巴贝斯虫的病媒。
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来源期刊
Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases
Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases INFECTIOUS DISEASES-MICROBIOLOGY
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
12.50%
发文量
185
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases is an international, peer-reviewed scientific journal. It publishes original research papers, short communications, state-of-the-art mini-reviews, letters to the editor, clinical-case studies, announcements of pertinent international meetings, and editorials. The journal covers a broad spectrum and brings together various disciplines, for example, zoology, microbiology, molecular biology, genetics, mathematical modelling, veterinary and human medicine. Multidisciplinary approaches and the use of conventional and novel methods/methodologies (in the field and in the laboratory) are crucial for deeper understanding of the natural processes and human behaviour/activities that result in human or animal diseases and in economic effects of ticks and tick-borne pathogens. Such understanding is essential for management of tick populations and tick-borne diseases in an effective and environmentally acceptable manner.
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