北美蜱(蜱螨:伊蚊科)与入侵的东亚长角血蜱(蜱螨:伊蚊科)之间心脏地带病毒的共食传播。

IF 2
Parker D Norman, Ahmed Garba, Clemence Obellianne, Meghan E Hermance
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引用次数: 0

摘要

长角血蜱是一种来自东亚的入侵蜱,在美国的地理范围迅速扩大。在实验室环境中,长角锥虫已被证明支持心脏地带病毒(HRTV;班达病毒属)的跨社会传播,心脏地带病毒是一种新出现的蜱传病原体,在美国南部和中西部引起人类疾病。当地的美洲钝角绦虫(Amblyomma americanum, L.)是已知的HRTV的主要媒介,现场监测研究记录了长角绦虫和美洲钝角绦虫在共享宿主上共同摄食,这就提出了种间病毒传播可能性的问题。为了研究长角蜱是否能通过与感染美洲角蜱共食获得HRTV,我们建立了感染HRTV的美洲角蜱若虫与未感染的美洲角蜱幼虫或若虫共食的小鼠模型,并采用q-RT-PCR筛选了受体蜱。从多只小鼠身上采集到HRTV RNA,证实HRTV在种间共食传播。小鼠血液样本HRTV RNA始终呈阴性,而蜱虫进食部位的一些皮肤活检呈病毒阳性,表明非病毒血症共食传播。这些发现提供了第一个实验证据,证明长角锥虫可以通过与美洲角锥虫共食获得HRTV RNA,并有助于其在自然界的维持,即使没有已知的HRTV宿主脊椎动物。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Co-feeding transmission of Heartland virus between the North American tick, Amblyomma americanum (Acari: Ixodidae), and the invasive East Asian tick, Haemaphysalis longicornis (Acari: Ixodidae).

Haemaphysalis longicornis Neumann is an invasive tick species from East Asia with a rapidly expanding geographic range in the United States. In a laboratory setting, H. longicornis has been shown to support transovarial transmission of Heartland virus (HRTV; genus Bandavirus), an emerging tick-borne pathogen responsible for human disease in the southern and midwestern United States. The native Amblyomma americanum (L.) is the primary known vector of HRTV, and field surveillance studies have documented co-feeding of H. longicornis and A. americanum on shared hosts, raising questions about the potential for interspecies viral transmission. To investigate whether H. longicornis can acquire HRTV through co-feeding with infected A. americanum, we used a mouse model in which HRTV-infected A. americanum nymphs were co-fed with uninfected H. longicornis larvae or nymphs and screened recipient ticks using q-RT-PCR. HRTV RNA was detected in H. longicornis collected from multiple mice, demonstrating interspecies co-feeding transmission of HRTV. Mouse blood samples were consistently negative for HRTV RNA, while some skin biopsies from tick feeding sites were positive for the virus, indicating nonviremic co-feeding transmission. These findings provide the first experimental evidence that H. longicornis can acquire HRTV RNA through co-feeding with A. americanum and could contribute to its maintenance in nature, even in the absence of a known vertebrate reservoir host for HRTV.

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