AI Article Synopsis

  • Plague, caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, spreads rapidly through fleas and has quiet periods where it persists, but little is known about its survival during these times.
  • It is theorized that Y. pestis survives in cycles involving fleas and resistant hosts, where susceptible hosts die, but resistant ones survive and maintain flea infections.
  • Recent studies show that fleas retain high infection rates and bacterial loads after feeding on both immunized and naive mice, supporting the idea that Y. pestis can persist even when hosts develop immunity.

Article Abstract

Plague, a primarily flea-borne disease caused by Yersinia pestis, is characterized by rapidly spreading epizootics separated by periods of quiescence. Little is known about how and where Y. pestis persists between epizootics. It is commonly proposed, however, that Y pestis is maintained during interepizootic periods in enzootic cycles involving flea vectors and relatively resistant host populations. According to this model, while susceptible individuals serve as infectious sources for feeding fleas and subsequently die of infection, resistant hosts survive infection, develop antibodies to the plague bacterium, and continue to provide bloodmeals to infected fleas. For Y. pestis to persist under this scenario, fleas must remain infected after feeding on hosts carrying antibodies to Y. pestis. Studies of other vector-borne pathogens suggest that host immunity may negatively impact pathogen survival in the vector. Here, we report infection rates and bacterial loads for fleas (both Xenopsylla cheopis (Rothschild) and Oropsylla montana (Baker)) that consumed an infectious bloodmeal and subsequently fed on an immunized or age-matched naive mouse. We demonstrate that neither the proportion of infected fleas nor the bacterial loads in infected fleas were significantly lower within 3 d of feeding on immunized versus naive mice. Our findings thus provide support for one assumption underlying the enzootic host model of interepizootic maintenance of Y. pestis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4636331PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1603/me14080DOI Listing

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