4.5 Article

Molecular Survey of Bartonella Species in Stray Cats and Dogs, Humans, and Questing Ticks from Portugal

Journal

PATHOGENS
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11070749

Keywords

Bartonella clarridgeiae; Bartonella henselae; cat scratch disease; Portugal; ticks; hosts

Categories

Funding

  1. Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia (FCT) under the project TickOmic [PTDC/CVT-CVT/29073/2017]
  2. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [303701/2021-8]
  3. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [PTDC/CVT-CVT/29073/2017] Funding Source: FCT

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This study investigated the occurrence of Bartonella spp. in animals, humans, and ticks in Portugal. The results showed that B. henselae and B. clarridgeiae are circulating in stray cats from Lisbon, while the sampled dogs, humans, and ticks were negative for Bartonella spp.
Bartonella spp. comprises emergent and re-emergent fastidious Gram-negative bacteria with worldwide distribution. Cats are the main reservoir hosts for Bartonella henselae and dogs represent opportunistic hosts for the bacteria. Even though ticks may also play a role in transmission, their competence as vectors for Bartonella spp. has not been totally understood. Considering only a few studies had a focus on screening Bartonella in animals, humans and ectoparasites in Portugal, this study aimed to address the molecular occurrence of Bartonella sp. in 123 stray cats, 25 stray dogs, 30 humans from Lisbon and 236 questing ticks within the country. Using a qPCR targeting the nuoG gene, it was possible to detect Bartonella sp. DNA on 20.32% of cat samples (25/123). From these positive samples, 13 sequences were characterized as B. henselae, 11 as B. clarridgeiae and 1 presented co-infection with both species. The absolute quantification of nuoG Bartonella DNA in sampled cats ranged from 2.78 x 10 to 1.03 x 10(5) copies/mu L. The sampled dogs, humans and ticks were negative. These results showed that B. henselae and B. clarridgeiae are circulating in stray cats from Lisbon. Additional and more extended studies should be conducted to determine the impact of such infections on humans, particularly those in constant and direct contact with cats.

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