Department of Entomology and W. M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Sep 9;8(9):e73661. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0073661. eCollection 2013.
Bed bugs (Cimex lectularius L.) have resurged in the United States and globally. Bed bugs are hematophagous ectoparasites of humans and other animals, including domestic pets, chickens, and bats, and their blood feeding habits contribute to their potential as disease vectors. Several species of Bartonella are re-emergent bacterial pathogens that also affect humans, domestic pets, bats and a number of other wildlife species. Because reports of both bed bugs and Bartonella have been increasing in the U.S., and because their host ranges can overlap, we investigated whether the resurgences of these medically important pathogens and their potential vector might be linked, by screening for Bartonella spp. in bed bugs collected from geographic areas where these pathogens are prevalent and from bed bugs that have been in culture in the laboratory for several years. We screened a total of 331 bed bugs: 316 bed bugs from 36 unique collections in 29 geographic locations in 13 states, 10 bed bugs from two colonies maintained in the laboratory for 3 yr, and 5 bed bugs from a colony that has been in culture since before the recent resurgence of bed bugs. Bartonella spp. DNA was screened using a polymerase chain reaction assay targeting the 16S-23S rRNA intergenic transcribed spacer region. Bartonella DNA was not amplified from any bed bug, but five bed bugs from four different apartments of an elderly housing building in North Carolina contained DNA sequences that corresponded to Burkholderia multivorans, an important pathogen in nosocomial infections that was not previously linked to an arthropod vector.
床虱(Cimex lectularius L.)在美国和全球范围内再度出现。床虱是人类和其他动物(包括宠物、鸡和蝙蝠)的吸血外寄生虫,它们的吸血习性使其成为潜在的疾病传播媒介。几种巴尔通体(Bartonella)细菌病原体也再次出现,这些病原体同样影响人类、宠物、蝙蝠和许多其他野生动物物种。由于美国的床虱和巴尔通体报告数量都在增加,而且它们的宿主范围可能重叠,因此我们通过筛选来自这些病原体流行地区的和实验室培养了数年的床虱中是否存在巴尔通体 spp.,来研究这些具有重要医学意义的病原体及其潜在媒介的再现是否存在关联。我们共筛查了 331 只床虱:来自 13 个州 29 个地点 36 个不同采集点的 316 只床虱,来自实验室维持了 3 年的两个群体的 10 只床虱,以及来自一个培养群体的 5 只床虱,该群体的培养始于床虱最近再现之前。使用针对 16S-23S rRNA 基因间转录间隔区的聚合酶链反应(PCR)检测方法筛选巴尔通体 spp. DNA。未从任何床虱中扩增到巴尔通体 DNA,但从北卡罗来纳州一栋老年住宅楼的四个不同公寓中的五只床虱中,含有与伯克霍尔德菌(Burkholderia multivorans)相对应的 DNA 序列,该菌是医院感染中的一种重要病原体,以前与节肢动物媒介无关。