Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Frederick P. Whiddon College of Medicine, University of South Alabama, Mobile, AL, USA.
Parasit Vectors. 2024 Jun 15;17(1):259. doi: 10.1186/s13071-024-06335-0.
Powassan virus, a North American tick-borne flavivirus, can cause severe neuroinvasive disease in humans. While Ixodes scapularis are the primary vectors of Powassan virus lineage II (POWV II), also known as deer tick virus, recent laboratory vector competence studies showed that other genera of ticks can horizontally and vertically transmit POWV II. One such tick is the Haemaphysalis longicornis, an invasive species from East Asia that recently established populations in the eastern USA and already shares overlapping geographic range with native vector species such as I. scapularis. Reports of invasive H. longicornis feeding concurrently with native I. scapularis on multiple sampled hosts highlight the potential for interspecies co-feeding transmission of POWV II. Given the absence of a clearly defined vertebrate reservoir host for POWV II, it is possible that this virus is sustained in transmission foci via nonviremic transmission between ticks co-feeding on the same vertebrate host. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether uninfected H. longicornis co-feeding in close proximity to POWV II-infected I. scapularis can acquire POWV independent of host viremia.
Using an in vivo tick transmission model, I. scapularis females infected with POWV II ("donors") were co-fed on mice with uninfected H. longicornis larvae and nymphs ("recipients"). The donor and recipient ticks were infested on mice in various sequences, and mouse infection status was monitored by temporal screening of blood for POWV II RNA via quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (q-RT-PCR).
The prevalence of POWV II RNA was highest in recipient H. longicornis that fed on viremic mice. However, nonviremic mice were also able to support co-feeding transmission of POWV, as demonstrated by the detection of viral RNA in multiple H. longicornis dispersed across different mice. Detection of viral RNA at the skin site of tick feeding but not at distal skin sites indicates that a localized skin infection facilitates transmission of POWV between donor and recipient ticks co-feeding in close proximity.
This is the first report examining transmission of POWV between co-feeding ticks. Against the backdrop of multiple unknowns related to POWV ecology, findings from this study provide insight on possible mechanisms by which POWV could be maintained in nature.
波瓦桑病毒是一种北美的蜱传黄病毒,可导致人类严重的神经侵袭性疾病。虽然伊氏扇头蜱是波瓦桑病毒谱系 II(POWV II)的主要传播媒介,也称为鹿蜱病毒,但最近的实验室媒介能力研究表明,其他属的蜱也可以水平和垂直传播 POWV II。一种这样的蜱是长角血蜱,它是一种来自东亚的入侵物种,最近在美国东部建立了种群,并且已经与本地传播媒介物种(如伊氏扇头蜱)共享重叠的地理范围。有报道称,入侵的长角血蜱与本地的伊氏扇头蜱在多个采样宿主上同时取食,这突出了 POWV II 种间共取食传播的可能性。鉴于目前尚无明确的 POWV II 脊椎动物储存宿主,这种病毒可能通过蜱在同一脊椎动物宿主上共取食时的非病毒血症传播而在传播焦点中维持传播。本研究的目的是评估未感染的长角血蜱在近距离接触感染 POWV II 的伊氏扇头蜱时是否可以在不依赖宿主病毒血症的情况下获得 POWV。
使用体内蜱传播模型,将感染 POWV II 的伊氏扇头蜱雌性(“供体”)与未感染的长角血蜱幼虫和若虫(“受体”)共喂饲小鼠。供体和受体蜱以不同的顺序寄生在小鼠上,通过时间性筛查血液中的 POWV II RNA ,利用定量逆转录聚合酶链反应(q-RT-PCR)监测小鼠的感染状态。
在感染病毒血症的小鼠上,受体长角血蜱的 POWV II RNA 流行率最高。然而,非病毒血症的小鼠也能够支持 POWV 的共取食传播,因为在不同的小鼠中检测到多个长角血蜱的病毒 RNA。在蜱取食的皮肤部位检测到病毒 RNA,但在远隔的皮肤部位未检测到病毒 RNA,这表明局部皮肤感染有助于供体和受体蜱在近距离共取食时传播 POWV。
这是首次研究 POWV 在共取食蜱之间的传播。在与 POWV 生态学相关的多个未知因素的背景下,本研究的结果提供了有关 POWV 如何在自然界中维持的可能机制的见解。