Department of Veterinary Microbiology and Pathology, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, United States; Animal Disease Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service, USDA, WSU, Pullman, WA, United States.
Department of Veterinary Microbiology and Pathology, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, United States; Parasitology and Animal Diseases Department, National Research Center, Dokki, Giza, Egypt.
Int J Parasitol. 2019 Feb;49(2):183-197. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2018.11.002. Epub 2019 Jan 26.
The global impact of bovine babesiosis caused by the tick-borne apicomplexan parasites Babesia bovis, Babesia bigemina and Babesia divergens is vastly underappreciated. These parasites invade and multiply asexually in bovine red blood cells (RBCs), undergo sexual reproduction in their tick vectors (Rhipicephalus spp. for B. bovis and B. bigemina, and Ixodes ricinus for B. divergens) and have a trans-ovarial mode of transmission. Babesia parasites can cause acute and persistent infections to adult naïve cattle that can occur without evident clinical signs, but infections caused by B. bovis are associated with more severe disease and increased mortality, and are considered to be the most virulent agent of bovine babesiosis. In addition, babesiosis caused by B. divergens has an important zoonotic potential. The disease caused by B. bovis and B. bigemina can be controlled, at least in part, using therapeutic agents or vaccines comprising live-attenuated parasites, but these methods are limited in terms of their safety, ease of deployability and long-term efficacy, and improved control measures are urgently needed. In addition, expansion of tick habitats due to climate change and other rapidly changing environmental factors complicate efficient control of these parasites. While the ability to cause persistent infections facilitates transmission and persistence of the parasite in endemic regions, it also highlights their capacity to evade the host immune responses. Currently, the mechanisms of immune responses used by infected bovines to survive acute and chronic infections remain poorly understood, warranting further research. Similarly, molecular details on the processes leading to sexual reproduction and the development of tick-stage parasites are lacking, and such tick-specific molecules can be targets for control using alternative transmission blocking vaccines. In this review, we identify and examine key phases in the life-cycle of Babesia parasites, including dependence on a tick vector for transmission, sexual reproduction of the parasite in the midgut of the tick, parasite-dependent invasion and egression of bovine RBCs, the role of the spleen in the clearance of infected RBCs (IRBCs), and age-related disease resistance in cattle, as opportunities for developing improved control measures. The availability of integrated novel research approaches including "omics" (such as genomics, transcriptomics, and proteomics), gene modification, cytoadhesion assays, RBC invasion assays and methods for in vitro induction of sexual-stage parasites will accelerate our understanding of parasite vulnerabilities. Further, producing new knowledge on these vulnerabilities, as well as taking full advantage of existing knowledge, by filling important research gaps should result in the development of next-generation vaccines to control acute disease and parasite transmission. Creative and effective use of current and future technical and computational resources are needed, in the face of the numerous challenges imposed by these highly evolved parasites, for improving the control of this disease. Overall, bovine babesiosis is recognised as a global disease that imposes a serious burden on livestock production and human livelihood, but it largely remains a poorly controlled disease in many areas of the world. Recently, important progress has been made in our understanding of the basic biology and host-parasite interactions of Babesia parasites, yet a good deal of basic and translational research is still needed to achieve effective control of this important disease and to improve animal and human health.
由蜱传播的顶复门寄生虫牛巴贝斯虫、双芽巴贝斯虫和分歧巴贝斯虫引起的牛巴贝斯虫病的全球影响被大大低估了。这些寄生虫在牛的红细胞(RBC)中入侵和无性繁殖,在其蜱载体(B. bovis 和 B. bigemina 的 Rhipicephalus spp.,以及 B. divergens 的Ixodes ricinus)中进行有性繁殖,并具有经卵巢传递的模式。巴贝斯虫寄生虫可引起成年牛的急性和持续性感染,这些感染可能没有明显的临床症状,但由 B. bovis 引起的感染与更严重的疾病和更高的死亡率有关,被认为是牛巴贝斯虫病最具毒性的病原体。此外,由 B. divergens 引起的巴贝斯虫病具有重要的人畜共患潜力。由 B. bovis 和 B. bigemina 引起的疾病可以通过使用包含活减毒寄生虫的治疗剂或疫苗来控制,至少在一定程度上可以控制,但这些方法在安全性、可部署性和长期疗效方面存在局限性,因此迫切需要改进控制措施。此外,由于气候变化和其他快速变化的环境因素,蜱的栖息地扩大,使这些寄生虫的有效控制变得复杂。虽然持续感染的能力有助于寄生虫在地方性地区的传播和持续存在,但也突出了它们逃避宿主免疫反应的能力。目前,受感染的牛用来在急性和慢性感染中存活的免疫反应机制仍知之甚少,这需要进一步研究。同样,导致有性繁殖和蜱期寄生虫发育的分子细节也缺乏,而这种蜱特异性分子可以作为使用替代传播阻断疫苗进行控制的靶点。在这篇综述中,我们确定并检查了巴贝斯虫寄生虫生命周期中的关键阶段,包括对蜱传播的依赖、寄生虫在蜱的中肠中的有性繁殖、寄生虫对牛 RBC 的依赖性入侵和逸出、脾脏在清除感染 RBC(IRBC)中的作用,以及牛的年龄相关疾病抵抗力,这些都是开发改进控制措施的机会。综合利用包括“组学”(如基因组学、转录组学和蛋白质组学)、基因修饰、细胞粘附测定、RBC 入侵测定和体外诱导有性阶段寄生虫的方法等新的综合研究方法的可用性,将加速我们对寄生虫脆弱性的理解。进一步,通过填补重要的研究空白,产生关于这些脆弱性的新知识,并充分利用现有的知识,应该会导致开发下一代疫苗来控制急性疾病和寄生虫传播。面对这些高度进化的寄生虫带来的众多挑战,需要创造性地有效利用当前和未来的技术和计算资源,以改善这种疾病的控制。总的来说,牛巴贝斯虫病被认为是一种全球性疾病,它给畜牧业生产和人类生计带来了严重负担,但在世界许多地区,这种疾病仍然基本没有得到很好的控制。最近,我们对巴贝斯虫寄生虫的基本生物学和宿主-寄生虫相互作用的理解取得了重要进展,但仍需要大量的基础和转化研究,以实现对这种重要疾病的有效控制,并改善动物和人类的健康。