4.6 Article

First Record of a Suspected Human-Pathogenic Borrelia Species in Populations of the Bat Tick Carios vespertilionis in Sweden

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9051100

Keywords

Carios vespertilionis; Pipistrellus pygmaeus; Borrelia sp; CPB1; relapsing fever; Sweden

Categories

Funding

  1. Carl Tryggers stiftelse
  2. Helge Ax:son Johnsons stiftelse
  3. Langmanska kulturfonden
  4. Magnus Bergvalls stiftelse
  5. Medical Research Council of Southeast Sweden (FORSS) [931010]
  6. Division of Laboratory Medicine, Region Jonkoping County
  7. ESGBOR (the European Study Group on Lyme Borrelioses)
  8. VectorNet, a European network [OC/EFSA/AHAW/2013/02-FWC1]
  9. European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
  10. European Centre for Disease prevention and Control (ECDC)

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The study suggests that the bat tick Carios vespertilionis may serve as a potential vector and reservoir of Borrelia species, posing a risk of human disease. The presence of a specific Borrelia species, CPB1, is identified with a certain distribution pattern.
The bat tick Carios vespertilionis has been reported from Sweden to occasionally feed on humans resulting in disease symptoms. The aim of this study was to investigate C. vespertilionis as a potential vector and reservoir of Borrelia species. In 2015 and 2018 in south-central Sweden, C. vespertilionis ticks were collected from a wooden bat box harboring Soprano pipistrelle bats, Pipistrellus pygmaeus. In addition, one C. vespertilionis tick found inside a house in southern Sweden in 2019 was collected. Ticks were screened for Borrelia spp. using a genus-specific quantitative PCR assay. The Borrelia species of the positive specimens were determined by conventional PCR followed by DNA sequencing and phylogenetic analyses. A total of 24% (22 of 92) of the analyzed C. vespertilionis ticks were Borrelia-positive. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that the bacteria belong to the relapsing fever group of borreliae; some of them appear to be identical with Borrelia sp. CPB1, a spirochete only found twice before-in the United Kingdom and in France. Our results also indicate a temporal and spatial distribution of this Borrelia species. Since C. vespertilionis occasionally bites humans, and since it exhibits a high prevalence of Borrelia bacteria, it is possible that it presents a risk of human disease. Further studies are needed to characterize Borrelia sp. CPB1 to determine if it is human-pathogenic and to determine if C. vespertilionis is a vector and/or reservoir of this agent.

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