Robich Rebecca M, Piantadosi Anne, Elias Susan P, Cosenza Danielle S, Schneider Elizabeth F, Baxter Lindsay, LaFon Erin, Lubelczyk Charles B, Meagher Molly, Vogels Chantal B F, Smith Robert P
Vector-Borne Disease Laboratory, MaineHealth Institute for Research, Scarborough, Maine.
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2024 Oct 15;111(6):1311-1319. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.23-0643. Print 2024 Dec 4.
Deer tick virus (DTV), also known as Powassan virus lineage II, is a rising health concern due to increased recognition as a cause of human encephalitis. Since European tick-borne encephalitis virus persists in nature in enzootic foci (i.e., higher prevalence rates in small pockets in nature), we sought to determine whether DTV is also focally maintained in relation to habitat type, to better understand factors leading to human risk of exposure. From 2018 to 2021, questing Ixodes scapularis ticks were collected from five habitats at the Wells National Estuarine Research Reserve (WNERR) in Wells, ME: forest with invasive vegetation in the understory, edge, shrub, forest with native vegetation in the understory, and open field. Deer tick virus prevalence was greater in adult ticks (2.0%) than in nymphs (0.5%). Deer tick virus prevalence in adult ticks collected from forest with invasive vegetation was 3.2% compared to 0 to 1.7% in other habitat types. A hot spot analysis revealed a higher number of infected adults collected per hour on one of the transects located in forest with invasive vegetation. Phylogenetic analysis of 37 full-length DTV genomes sequenced in this study revealed four major clades from the WNERR, and there was high genetic diversity within each transect, suggesting frequent, short-range dispersal between habitats. Analysis of DTV sequences from other New England counties and states also indicated long-distance dispersal to and/or from the WNERR. This study provides preliminary evidence that DTV is focal and that the risk of encountering DTV-infected ticks in forest with invasive vegetation may be greater than in other habitat types.
鹿蜱病毒(DTV),也被称为波瓦桑病毒II型,由于越来越多地被认为是人类脑炎的病因,其对健康的影响日益受到关注。由于欧洲蜱传脑炎病毒在自然疫源地(即自然界中小范围内的较高流行率)持续存在,我们试图确定DTV是否也与栖息地类型有关而呈局部维持状态,以便更好地了解导致人类接触风险的因素。2018年至2021年期间,在缅因州韦尔斯的韦尔斯国家河口研究保护区(WNERR)的五个栖息地采集了饥饿的肩突硬蜱:林下有入侵植被的森林、边缘地带、灌木丛、林下有原生植被的森林和开阔田野。成年蜱中的鹿蜱病毒流行率(2.0%)高于若虫(0.5%)。从林下有入侵植被的森林中采集的成年蜱中,鹿蜱病毒流行率为3.2%,而其他栖息地类型的流行率为0至1.7%。热点分析显示,在位于林下有入侵植被的森林中的一个样带上,每小时采集到的感染成年蜱数量较多。对本研究中测序的37个全长DTV基因组进行的系统发育分析揭示了来自WNERR的四个主要进化枝,并且每个样带内都有很高的遗传多样性,表明栖息地之间频繁的短距离扩散。对来自新英格兰其他县和州的DTV序列分析也表明有向WNERR和/或从WNERR的远距离扩散。这项研究提供了初步证据,表明DTV是局部性的,并且在林下有入侵植被的森林中遇到感染DTV的蜱的风险可能大于其他栖息地类型。