Diversity of bartonellae in mites (Acari: Mesostigmata: Macronyssidae and Spinturnicidae) of boreal forest bats: Association of host specificity of mites and habitat selection of hosts with vector potential

Author:

Sándor Attila D.123,Corduneanu Alexandra34ORCID,Orlova Maria567ORCID,Hornok Sándor12,Cabezas‐Cruz Alejandro8,Foucault‐Simonin Angélique8,Kulisz Joanna9,Zając Zbigniew9,Borzan Mihai4

Affiliation:

1. HUN‐REN‐UVMB Climate Change: New Blood‐sucking Parasites and Vector‐borne Pathogens Research Group Budapest Hungary

2. Department of Parasitology and Zoology University of Veterinary Medicine Budapest Hungary

3. Department of Parasitology and Parasitic Diseases University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Cluj‐Napoca Romania

4. Department of Animal Breeding and Animal Production University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Cluj‐Napoca Romania

5. Department of Mobilization Training of Health Care and Disaster Medicine Tyumen State Medical University Tyumen Russia

6. Department of Research and Production Laboratory of Engineering Surveys and Environmental Technologies National Research Tomsk State University Tomsk Russia

7. Laboratory of Transmissible Viral Infections and Tick‐Borne Encephalitis Federal Scientific Research Institute of Viral Infections ‘Virome’ Yekaterinburg Russia

8. ANSES, INRAE, Ecole Nationale Vétérinaire d'Alfort UMR BIPAR, Laboratoire de Santé Animale Maisons‐Alfort France

9. Department of Biology and Parasitology Medical University of Lublin Lublin Poland

Abstract

AbstractResearch into various bacterial pathogens that can be transmitted between different animals and may have zoonotic potential has led to the discovery of different strains of Bartonella sp. in bats and their associated ectoparasites. Despite their enormous species diversity, only a few studies have focussed on the detection of bacterial pathogens in insectivorous bats of boreal forests and their associated Macronyssidae and Spinturnicidae mites. We collected and molecularly analysed mite samples from forest‐dwelling bat species distributed all along the boreal belt of the Palearctic, from Central Europe to Far East. Ectoparasitic mites were pooled for DNA extraction and DNA amplification polymerase chain reaction (PCRs) were conducted to detect the presence of various bacterial (Anaplasmataceae, Bartonella sp., Rickettsia sp., Mycoplasma sp.) and protozoal (Hepatozoon sp.) pathogens. Bartonella sp. DNA was detected in four different mite species (Macronyssidae: Steatonyssus periblepharus and Spinturnicidae: Spinturnix acuminata, Sp. myoti and Sp. mystacinus), with different prevalences of the targeted gene (gltA, 16‐23S ribosomal RNA intergenic spacer and ftsZ). Larger pools (>5 samples pooled) were more likely to harbour Bartonella sp. DNA, than smaller ones. In addition, cave‐dwelling bat hosts and host generalist mite species are more associated with Bartonella spp. presence. Spinturnicidae mites may transmit several distinct Bartonella strains, which cluster phylogenetically close to Bartonella species known to cause diseases in humans and livestock. Mites with ubiquitous presence may facilitate the long‐term maintenance (and even local recurrence) of Bartonella‐infestations inside local bat populations, thus acting as continuous reservoirs for Bartonella spp in bats.

Funder

Nemzeti Kutatási Fejlesztési és Innovációs Hivatal

Publisher

Wiley

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