Palma Mariana, Lopes de Carvalho Isabel, Osório Hugo, Zé-Zé Líbia, Cutler Sally J, Núncio Maria Sofia
1 Centro de Estudos de Vectores e Doenças Infecciosas Dr. Francisco Cambournac, Instituto Nacional de Saúde Dr. Ricardo Jorge , Águas de Moura, Portugal .
Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis. 2013 Oct;13(10):775-7. doi: 10.1089/vbz.2012.1070. Epub 2013 Jun 29.
The hematophagous soft tick Ornithodoros erraticus feeds nocturnally on multiple warm-blooded vertebrate hosts. This tick is often found living buried in the soil of traditional pigpens. O. erraticus is an important infectious disease vector both for humans and animals. In the Iberian Peninsula, this tick serves as the vector of human tick-borne relapsing fever caused by the spirochete Borrelia hispanica. The natural ecosystems maintaining this spirochete are not well understood, with details of competent vertebrate reservoirs and tick-host interactions poorly understood. Investigation of arthropod blood meal composition provides evidence linking the vector to specific hosts, providing insights into possible disease reservoirs. Ticks collected from two pigpens located in southern Portugal were subjected to blood meal analysis. PCR amplification of vertebrate cytochrome b was used to disclose the original host from which 349 ticks had derived their previous blood meal. Host origins for blood meal analysis from 79 of 349 ticks revealed that 46.8% had previously fed from pigs, 35.4% human, 13.9% bovine, 5.1% sheep, 1.3% rodent, and 1.3% from birds. Three samples revealed mixed blood meals, namely, human-pig (1.3%), sheep-pig (1.3%), and bovine-pig (1.3%). The major role of pigs as hosts is consistent with fieldwork observations and underlines the importance of pigs for maintaining O. erraticus tick populations. Humans serve as accidental hosts, frequently confirmed by reports from both producers and veterinarians. Other livestock species and wildlife prevalent in the region appear only to have a minor role in maintaining this tick. The results demonstrate the importance of blood meal analysis to determine tick hosts providing a tool for investigation of sylvatic cycle for Borrelia hispanica.
吸血软蜱奇异扇头蜱夜间吸食多种温血脊椎动物宿主的血液。这种蜱经常被发现埋在传统猪圈的土壤中。奇异扇头蜱是人和动物重要的传染病传播媒介。在伊比利亚半岛,这种蜱是由西班牙疏螺旋体引起的人类蜱传回归热的传播媒介。维持这种螺旋体的自然生态系统尚不清楚,脊椎动物宿主和蜱与宿主相互作用的细节也知之甚少。对节肢动物血餐成分的调查提供了将传播媒介与特定宿主联系起来的证据,有助于深入了解可能的疾病宿主。对从葡萄牙南部两个猪圈采集的蜱进行了血餐分析。通过对脊椎动物细胞色素b进行PCR扩增,以揭示349只蜱先前吸食血液的原始宿主。对349只蜱中的79只进行血餐分析的宿主来源显示,46.8%的蜱先前吸食过猪的血液,35.4%吸食过人的血液,13.9%吸食过牛的血液,5.1%吸食过羊的血液,1.3%吸食过啮齿动物的血液,1.3%吸食过鸟类的血液。三个样本显示为混合血餐,即人-猪(1.3%)、羊-猪(1.3%)和牛-猪(1.3%)。猪作为宿主的主要作用与实地观察结果一致,突出了猪对维持奇异扇头蜱种群数量的重要性。人类是偶然宿主,这一点经常得到养殖者和兽医报告的证实。该地区常见的其他家畜物种和野生动物在维持这种蜱的数量方面似乎只起次要作用。结果表明,血餐分析对于确定蜱的宿主非常重要,为研究西班牙疏螺旋体的自然疫源地提供了一种工具。