AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the presence of pathogenic Rickettsia in wildlife, particularly small mammals, in peri-urban areas of Uberlândia, Brazil, focusing on potential tick vectors and how these mammals react to various Rickettsia antigens.
  • Researchers captured 416 small mammals, identified ticks from those animals, and tested blood samples, revealing a 16.8% seroprevalence of Rickettsia with higher rates in marsupials compared to rodents.
  • The findings indicate that Rickettsia is circulating in this area, particularly R. bellii and R. rickettsii, although the overall levels of seroreactivity are relatively low.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Sources of pathogenic Rickettsia in wildlife are largely unknown in Brazil. In this work, potential tick vectors and seroreactivity of small mammals against four spotted-fever group Rickettsia (R. rickettsii, R. parkeri, R. amblyommii and R. rhipicephali) and Rickettsia bellii from peri-urban areas of Uberlândia, a major town in Brazil, are described for the first time.

Methodology: Small mammals were captured and blood samples collected. Ticks were collected from the surface of the host and the environment and posteriorly identified. Reactivity of small mammal sera to Rickettsia was tested by indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA) using crude antigens from five Brazilian Rickettsia isolates.

Results: Information was obtained from 416 small mammals (48 Marsupialia and 368 Rodentia). Forty-eight animals were parasitized and two tick species, Ixodes loricatus and Amblyomma dubitatum, were found on several host species, with a few tick-host relationships described for the first time. From the 416 tested sera, 70 reacted to at least one Rickettsia antigen (prevalence of 16.8%) and from these, 19 (27.1%) reacted to two or more antigens. Seroprevalence was higher for marsupials (39.6%) than for rodents (13.8%). Marsupial and Rhipidomys spp. sera reacted mainly (highest seroprevalence and titers) to R. bellii, and that of Necromys lasiurus mainly to R. rickettsii.

Conclusions: Although the serologic assays poorly discriminate between closely related spotted-fever group Rickettsia, the observed small mammal seroreactivity suggests the circulation of Rickettsia in the peri-urban area of Uberlândia, albeit at low levels.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3855/jidc.7084DOI Listing

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