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Genetic diversity infection prevalence and possible transmission routes of Bartonella spp. in vampire bats

机译:巴尔通体的遗传多样性感染率和可能的传播途径。在吸血蝙蝠中

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摘要

Bartonella spp. are globally distributed bacteria that cause endocarditis in humans and domestic animals. Recent work has suggested bats as zoonotic reservoirs of some human Bartonella infections; however, the ecological and spatiotemporal patterns of infection in bats remain largely unknown. Here we studied the genetic diversity, prevalence of infection across seasons and years, individual risk factors, and possible transmission routes of Bartonella in populations of common vampire bats (Desmodus rotundus) in Peru and Belize, for which high infection prevalence has previously been reported. Phylogenetic analysis of the gltA gene for a subset of PCR-positive blood samples revealed sequences that were related to Bartonella described from vampire bats from Mexico, other Neotropical bat species, and streblid bat flies. Sequences associated with vampire bats clustered significantly by country but commonly spanned Central and South America, implying limited spatial structure. Stable and nonzero Bartonella prevalence between years supported endemic transmission in all sites. The odds of Bartonella infection for individual bats was unrelated to the intensity of bat flies ectoparasitism, but nearly all infected bats were infested, which precluded conclusive assessment of support for vector-borne transmission. While metagenomic sequencing found no strong evidence of Bartonella DNA in pooled bat saliva and fecal samples, we detected PCR positivity in individual saliva and feces, suggesting the potential for bacterial transmission through both direct contact (i.e., biting) and environmental (i.e., fecal) exposures. Further investigating the relative contributions of direct contact, environmental, and vector-borne transmission for bat Bartonella is an important next step to predict infection dynamics within bats and the risks of human and livestock exposures.
机译:巴尔通体属是在人类和家畜中引起心内膜炎的全球分布细菌。近期的研究表明,蝙蝠是某些人类巴尔通体感染的人畜共患病的宿主。然而,蝙蝠感染的生态学和时空模式仍然未知。在这里,我们研究了秘鲁和伯利兹的普通吸血蝙蝠(圆形僵尸)种群中的遗传多样性,不同季节和年份的感染流行率,个体危险因素以及巴尔通体的可能传播途径,以前已经报道了其高流行率。对一部分PCR阳性血液样本的gltA基因进行系统进化分析,揭示了与墨西哥吸血蝙蝠,其他新热带蝙蝠物种和硬皮蝙蝠苍蝇描述的巴尔通体相关的序列。与吸血蝙蝠相关的序列在各个国家/地区之间明显聚集,但通常跨越中美洲和南美洲,这意味着空间结构有限。几年间稳定的Bartonella流行率不为零,这支持了所有地点的地方性传播。单个蝙蝠感染Bartonella的几率与蝙蝠外生殖道炎的强度无关,但是几乎所有被感染的蝙蝠都受到感染,因此无法对对媒介传播的支持进行结论性评估。虽然宏基因组测序未发现合并的蝙蝠唾液和粪便样品中Bartonella DNA的有力证据,但我们检测到单个唾液和粪便中的PCR阳性,表明细菌通过直接接触(即咬合)和环境(即粪便)传播的可能性曝光。进一步调查蝙蝠的直接接触,环境和媒介传播途径的相对贡献Bartonella是预测蝙蝠内感染动态以及人类和家畜接触风险的重要下一步。

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