Abstract

ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to characterize the bacterial microbiome of hard ticks with affinity to bite humans in La Rioja (North of Spain).MethodsA total of 88 adult ticks (22 Rhipicephalus sanguineus sensu lato, 27 Haemaphysalis punctata, 30 Dermacentor marginatus and 9 Ixodes ricinus) and 120 I. ricinus nymphs (CRETAV collection, La Rioja, Spain), representing the main anthropophilic species in our environment, were subjected to a metagenomic analysis of the V3-V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene using an Illumina MiSeq platform. Data obtained with Greengenes database were refined with BLAST. Four groups of samples were defined, according to the four tick species.ResultsProteobacteria was the predominant phylum observed in all groups. Gammaproteobacteria was the most abundant class, followed by Alphaproteobacteria for R. sanguineus, H. punctata and D. marginatus but the relative abundance of reads for these classes was reversed for I. ricinus. This tick species showed more than 46% reads corresponding to ‘not assigned’ OTUs (Greengenes), and >97% of them corresponded to ‘Candidatus Midichloriaceae’ using BLAST. Within Rickettsiales, ‘Candidatus Midichloria’, Rickettsia, Ehrlichia, ‘Candidatus Neoehrlichia’ and Wolbachia were detected. I. ricinus was the most alpha-diverse species. Regarding beta-diversity, I. ricinus and H. punctata samples grouped according to their tick species but microbial communities of some R. sanguineus and D. marginatus specimens clustered together.ConclusionsThe metagenomics approach seems useful to discover the spectrum of tick-related bacteria. More studies are needed to identify and differentiate bacterial species, and to improve the knowledge of tick-borne diseases in Spain.

Highlights

  • The metagenomics approach seems useful to discover the spectrum of tick-related bacteria

  • All samples grouped according to their tick species, except four R. sanguineus specimens that clustered within H. punctata (n = 2) or I. ricinus (n = 2) (Fig 5)

  • We have learned throughout history that microorganisms first detected in ticks, and for a long time considered non-pathogenic to humans, have been later implicated in human diseases (e.g. Rickettsia parkeri), even though some of them do not fulfil Koch’s Postulates (e.g. ‘Ca. N mikurensis’, a notyet-cultivated bacterium) [3,28,29,30,31]

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Summary

Objective

The aim of this study was to characterize the bacterial microbiome of hard ticks with affinity to bite humans in La Rioja (North of Spain).

Methods
Results
Conclusions
Materials and methods
Discussion
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