Department of Microbiology and Immunology, College of Graduate Studies, Midwestern University, Glendale, Arizona, USA.
CWDEvolution LLC, San Diego, California, USA.
mSphere. 2021 Aug 25;6(4):e0051521. doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00515-21. Epub 2021 Aug 4.
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a progressive and fatal spongiform encephalopathy of deer and elk species, caused by a misfolded variant of the normal prion protein. Horizontal transmission of the misfolded CWD prion between animals is thought to occur through shedding in saliva and other forms of excreta. The role of blood in CWD transmission is less clear, though infectivity has been demonstrated in various blood fractions. Blood-feeding insects, including ticks, are known vectors for a range of bacterial and viral infections in animals and humans, though to date, there has been no evidence for their involvement in prion disease transmission. In the present study, we evaluated winter ticks (Dermacentor albipictus) collected from 136 North American elk (Cervus canadensis) in an area where CWD is endemic for evidence of CWD prion amplification using the real-time quaking-induced conversion assay (RT-QuIC). Although 30 elk were found to be CWD positive (22%) postmortem, amplifiable prions were found in just a single tick collected from an elk in advanced stages of CWD infection, with some evidence for prions in ticks collected from elk in mid-stage infection. These findings suggest that further investigation of ticks as reservoirs for prion disease may be warranted. This study reports the first finding of detectable levels of prions linked to chronic wasting disease in a tick collected from a clinically infected elk. Using the real-time quaking-induced conversion assay (RT-QuIC), "suspect" samples were also identified; these suspect ticks were more likely to have been collected from CWD-positive elk, though suspect amplification was also observed in ticks collected from CWD-negative elk. Observed levels were at the lower end of our detection limits, though our findings suggest that additional research evaluating ticks collected from animals in late-stage disease may be warranted to further evaluate the role of ticks as potential vectors of chronic wasting disease.
慢性消耗病(CWD)是一种渐进且致命的鹿科和麋鹿科动物海绵状脑病,由正常朊病毒蛋白的错误折叠变体引起。动物之间错误折叠的 CWD 朊病毒的水平传播被认为是通过唾液和其他形式的排泄物中的脱落而发生的。尽管在各种血液成分中已经证明了传染性,但血液在 CWD 传播中的作用尚不明确。吸血昆虫,包括蜱,已知是动物和人类中一系列细菌和病毒感染的载体,尽管迄今为止,尚无证据表明它们参与朊病毒病的传播。在本研究中,我们评估了从慢性消耗病流行地区的 136 头北美麋鹿(Cervus canadensis)中采集的 30 头被认为是慢性消耗病阳性(22%)的冬季蜱(Dermacentor albipictus),使用实时震颤诱导转化测定法(RT-QuIC)检测是否存在慢性消耗病朊病毒扩增。尽管从处于慢性消耗病感染晚期的麋鹿中仅从一只 ticks 中发现了可扩增的朊病毒,但在处于慢性消耗病感染中期的 elk 中采集的一些 ticks 中也发现了一些朊病毒。这些发现表明,进一步调查 ticks 是否可能是朊病毒病的储主是有必要的。本研究报告了首次在从患有临床感染的麋鹿中采集的 ticks 中发现与慢性消耗病相关的可检测水平的朊病毒。使用实时震颤诱导转化测定法(RT-QuIC),还确定了“可疑”样本;这些可疑的 ticks 更有可能来自 CWD 阳性的 elk,但在 CWD 阴性的 elk 中也观察到可疑的扩增。观察到的水平处于我们检测下限的低端,但我们的研究结果表明,进一步评估从晚期疾病动物中采集的 ticks 可能是必要的,以进一步评估 ticks 作为慢性消耗病潜在载体的作用。