The Bushbuckridge-East community in Mpumalanga Province, South Africa is bordered by nature reserves, including the Manyeleti Game Reserve. Murid rodents are prevalent in both Manyeleti and communal rangelands adjoining the community households. Although rodents are reservoir hosts for a broad range of viral, bacterial and parasitic pathogens, the rodent microbial diversity and transmission of zoonotic agents to humans in the community is understudied. In this study we investigated bacterial diversity in wild and commensal rodents sampled from different habitats. The 16S rRNA gene was amplified from DNA extracted from the blood of 24 wild and one sp. and subjected to PacBio circular consensus sequencing. As species were dominant in the blood microbiome, gene characterization was performed to delineate species. Rodents sampled from peri-urban and communal rangelands had higher proportions of spp. [Hlalakahle (77.7%), Gottenburg (47.8%), Tlhavekisa (83.8%)] compared to those from the protected habitat (43.8%). spp., spp., and were detected at <1% of the sequence reads. Conventional PCR and sequencing validated the detection of spp. with the first confirmation of infection in in South Africa. Additionally, 317 mites, 90 fleas, 10 ticks and eight lice were collected from the rodents, providing evidence of possible vectors of the organisms detected. The detection of zoonotic agents in rodents in Bushbuckridge-East community, together with prior serological confirmation of and in non-malarial acute febrile patients from this community, highlights the possible risks that commensal rodents pose to human health.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11830667PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2025.1520086DOI Listing

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