INALI   02622
INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE LIMNOLOGIA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
First detection of Candidatus Rickettsia wissemanii in Ornithodoros hasei (Schulze, 1935) (Acari: Argasidae) from Argentina
Autor/es:
PAVÉ ROMINA; AGUSTÍN FASANO; JOSÉ VENZAL; MARIA EUGENIA MONTANIA; MARCELO GAMBOA; SANTIAGO NAVA; COLOMBO VALERIA; LEANDO ANTONIAZZI; MARÍA FÉLIX
Revista:
Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases
Editorial:
Elsevier
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 11
ISSN:
1877-959X
Resumen:
The aim of this study was to assess the presence of Rickettsia in soft ticks (Acari: Argasidae) collected from insectivorous bats (Chiroptera) in Santa Fe province, Argentina. First, a subset of ticks were mounted in Hoyer?s medium to be determined by morphological characters and then confirmed by sequencing the mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene. Also ticks were processed by PCR assays using primers CS-78 and CS-323, which amplify a fragment of the Rickettsia spp. gltA gene. Positive ticks were subjected to a second PCR round with primers Rr190.70p and Rr190.701n of the spotted fever group rickettsiae ompA gene. A phylogenetic analysis was performed with Maximum-likelihood method, and the best fitting substitution models were determined with the Akaike Information Criterion. Five bats of the species Eptesicus diminutus Osgood, 1915, Eptesicus furinalis (d?Orbigny and Gervais, 1847), Eptesicus spp. (Vespertilionidae), and Molossopstemminckii Burmeister, 1854 (Molossidae) were parasitized with Ornithodoros hasei (Schulze, 1935) larvae. One E. diminutus ticks? tested positive to ?Candidatus Rickettsia wissemanii?, a spotted fever group rickettsiae. The association O. hasei ??Ca. R. wissemanii? detected in this study represents the first evidence of a Rickettsia in Ornithodoros ticks in Argentina and the thirdreport of this association in America. Also, this finding constitutes the first record of ?Ca. R. wissemanii? in Argentina. Finally, we found for the first time the insectivorous bats E. diminutus and E. furinalis parasitized with O. hasei larvae. These findings add two new hosts and a new location, the southernmost recorded to date, for O. hasei.