Abstract

BackgroundRickettsia rickettsii is vectored by ticks, and some vertebrate hosts can be sources of infection to ticks during bacteremic periods. In Brazil, the main vector for R. rickettsii is the tick Amblyomma sculptum, a member of the A. cajennense complex. Horses, in turn, are one of the major hosts for A. sculptum. In this study, horses experimentally infected with R. rickettsii were assessed for clinical changes and their capability to transmit the infection to A. sculptum ticks.MethodsFour horses were infected with R. rickettsii through either intraperitoneal injection or infestation with R. rickettsii-infected A. sculptum ticks. Simultaneously, the animals were infested with non-infected A. sculptum ticks. The horses were monitored for 30 days by clinical examination, hematological and biochemical tests, real-time PCR of blood for the detection of Rickettsia, and inoculation of blood in guinea pigs. IgG antibody titers were followed until the horses have shown seronegativity or until the end of the experiment. Uninfected ticks that fed on horses were subjected to real-time PCR and/or were fed on susceptible rabbits.ResultsThe horses showed no clinical, hematological or blood biochemical alterations, and bacteremia was not detected by real-time PCR or by inoculation of horse blood into guinea pigs. Anti-R. rickettsii antibodies were detected in horses from 10 days to 2 years after infection. Uninfected ticks, after feeding on infected horses, showed 2.1 % positivity in real-time PCR, but failed to transmit the infection to rabbits at a next feeding stage.ConclusionsRickettsia rickettsii-infected horses did not manifest illness and are not competent amplifier hosts of R. rickettsii for A. sculptum ticks.

Highlights

  • Rickettsia rickettsii is vectored by ticks, and some vertebrate hosts can be sources of infection to ticks during bacteremic periods

  • The bacterium Rickettsia rickettsii is the etiological agent of a severe illness in humans, known as Brazilian spotted fever (BSF) in Brazil or Rocky Mountain spotted fever in the USA [1]

  • We aimed to investigate the clinical findings in horses experimentally infected with R. rickettsii and the role of horses as amplifier hosts of the bacterium for A. sculptum ticks

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Summary

Introduction

Rickettsia rickettsii is vectored by ticks, and some vertebrate hosts can be sources of infection to ticks during bacteremic periods. In Brazil, the main vector for R. rickettsii is the tick Amblyomma sculptum, a member of the A. cajennense complex. In South America, the main vectors of R. rickettsii are ticks of the Amblyomma cajennense species complex, called as A. cajennense (sensu lato) (s.l.) [1, 4, 5]. This species complex occurs only in the Americas and is. Ticks are natural reservoirs of R. rickettsii and may remain infected for life They acquire the infection by transovarial transmission or through feeding on bacteremic vertebrate animals, which are called amplifier hosts [1, 7]. In the case of A. sculptum (reported as A. cajennense), the second mechanism is essential for the

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