Gibson Nathaniel L, Ghersi Bruno M, Knudson Bridget, Peterson Anna C, Riegel Claudia, Tu Weihong, Dumonteil Eric, Herrera Claudia, Blum Michael J
University of Tennessee Knoxville, Knoxville, Tennessee, United States of America.
Tufts University Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine, North Grafton, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2025 Apr 1;19(4):e0012930. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0012930. eCollection 2025 Apr.
Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas disease, has been detected in mammalian hosts occupying densely populated urban environments. This suggests that the risk of transmission to humans is higher than prevailing estimates, which largely reflect conditions in rural and peri-urban areas. Understanding the risks posed by T. cruzi thus requires further study of transmission pathways in part because triatomines - the primary vectors for T. cruzi - appear to be uncommon or absent in urban landscapes. Here we test the hypothesis that vertical transmission contributes to the prevalence of infection and diversity of T. cruzi in urban reservoirs.
We assessed whether embryos of T. cruzi-positive parous female rodents also exhibit evidence of infection. A diagnostic PCR assay detected T. cruzi in 15 out of 66 (22.7%) embryos from Norway rats, black rats, and house mice captured in New Orleans (LA, USA). Genotyping PCR identified the presence of TcI and non-TcI discrete typing units (DTUs) in individual infected embryos, providing evidence of mixed infection. Next-generation sequencing provided additional evidence of mixed infection in individual embryos.
Our findings provide additional evidence that vertical transmission can occur in natural populations of reservoir species and demonstrates for the first time that multiple DTUs can transmit from mother to offspring. Our study also demonstrates that vertical transmission can contribute to the prevalence of infection and diversity of T. cruzi in multiple reservoir species occupying urban landscapes where vectors appear to be rare or absent, providing a new baseline for understanding transmission pathways and eco-epidemiological cycling of T.cruzi.
克氏锥虫是恰加斯病的病原体,已在居住于人口密集城市环境的哺乳动物宿主中被检测到。这表明其传播给人类的风险高于目前的普遍估计,目前的估计主要反映的是农村和城市周边地区的情况。因此,了解克氏锥虫所带来的风险需要进一步研究传播途径,部分原因是克氏锥虫的主要传播媒介——锥蝽——在城市环境中似乎并不常见或不存在。在此,我们检验垂直传播有助于克氏锥虫在城市宿主中感染流行率和多样性的这一假设。
我们评估了克氏锥虫阳性的经产雌性啮齿动物的胚胎是否也有感染迹象。一种诊断性聚合酶链反应(PCR)检测方法在美国路易斯安那州新奥尔良捕获的66只挪威大鼠、黑鼠和家鼠的胚胎中检测到15只(22.7%)有克氏锥虫。基因分型PCR确定了单个受感染胚胎中存在TcI和非TcI离散型单元(DTUs),提供了混合感染的证据。下一代测序为单个胚胎中的混合感染提供了更多证据。
我们的研究结果提供了更多证据,证明垂直传播可在宿主物种的自然种群中发生,并首次证明多个DTUs可从母体传播给后代。我们的研究还表明,在媒介似乎稀少或不存在的城市环境中,垂直传播可导致多种宿主物种中克氏锥虫感染的流行率和多样性增加,为理解克氏锥虫的传播途径和生态流行病学循环提供了新的基线。