Abstract

Bats can harbor zoonotic pathogens causing emerging infectious diseases, but their status as hosts for bacteria is limited. We aimed to investigate the distribution, prevalence and genetic diversity of Borrelia in bats and bat ticks in Hubei Province, China, which will give us a better understanding of the risk of Borrelia infection posed by bats and their ticks. During 2018–2020, 403 bats were captured from caves in Hubei Province, China, 2 bats were PCR-positive for Borrelia. Sequence analysis of rrs, flaB and glpQ genes of positive samples showed 99.55%-100% similarity to Candidatus Borrelia fainii, a novel human-pathogenic relapsing fever Borrelia species recently reported in Zambia, Africa and Eastern China, which was clustered together with relapsing fever Borrelia species traditionally reported only in the New World. Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and pairwise genetic distances further confirmed the Borrelia species in the bats from Central China as Candidatus Borrelia fainii. No Borrelia DNA was detected in ticks collected from bats. The detection of this human-pathogenic relapsing fever Borrelia in bats suggests a wide distribution of this novel relapsing fever Borrelia species in China, which may pose a threat to public health in China.

Highlights

  • Relapsing fever is a zoonosis caused by the relapsing fever group spirochetes of the genus Borrelia, and its clinical symptoms include recurrent febrile episodes with headache, myalgia, chills, and nausea [1]

  • Our study found human pathogenic relapsing fever Candidatus Borrelia fainii in Central China, suggesting bat borne Borrelia spirochetes may pose a threat to public health in China

  • Our group found that one Myotis bat from Shandong Province in Eastern China was infected with Candidatus Borrelia fainii, as the first report of this novel relapsing fever Borrelia species in Asia [14]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Relapsing fever is a zoonosis caused by the relapsing fever group spirochetes of the genus Borrelia, and its clinical symptoms include recurrent febrile episodes with headache, myalgia, chills, and nausea [1]. As one of the parasites of bats, act as the most important arthropod vectors for transmitting microbial pathogens to animals and humans Once bitten by these ticks, the risk of infection will increase. A recent study found bats and bat soft ticks from a cave in Zambia, Africa showed a high infection rate with Candidatus Borrelia fainii, which was a novel human-pathogenic relapsing fever Borrelia species clustered together with the New World relapsing fever borreliae. It proposed that bats and bat soft ticks contributed to the environmental cycle of this Borrelia species as hosts and vectors, respectively [13]. We aimed to investigate the distribution, prevalence and genetic diversity of Borrelia in bats and bat ticks from Hubei Province, China, which will give us a better understanding of the risk of Borrelia infection posed by bats and their ticks

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call