Eco-epidemiology of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and infection with Orientia spp. in Southern Chile

Background: Scrub typhus is a potentially severe infection caused by bacteria of the genus Orientia, endemic in Asia-Pacific and recently discovered in southern Chile. The presented study aimed to determine the prevalence and species richness of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and their infectio...

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Published in:PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Main Authors: Silva, María, Pérez, Caricia, Martínez, Constanza, Pérez, Ruth, Vial Cox, María Cecilia, Stekolnikov, Alexandr, Abarca, Katia, Thomas Weitzel, Weitzel, Thomas, Acosta, Gerardo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11447/9039
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011051
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spelling ftunivdesarrollo:oai:repositorio.udd.cl:11447/9039 2024-06-23T07:47:55+00:00 Eco-epidemiology of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and infection with Orientia spp. in Southern Chile Silva, María Pérez, Caricia Martínez, Constanza Pérez, Ruth Vial Cox, María Cecilia Stekolnikov, Alexandr Abarca, Katia Thomas Weitzel Weitzel, Thomas Acosta, Gerardo 2023 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11447/9039 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011051 en eng Silva de la Fuente MC, Pérez C, Martínez-Valdebenito C, Pérez R, Vial C, Stekolnikov A, Abarca K, Weitzel T, Acosta-Jamett G. Eco-epidemiology of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and infection with Orientia spp. in Southern Chile. PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2023 Jan 12;17(1):e0011051. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0011051 https://hdl.handle.net/11447/9039 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011051 Chile / epidemiology Orientia tsutsugamushi / genetics Rodentia Scrub Typhus / epidemiology Scrub Typhus / microbiology Trombiculidae / microbiology Animals Article 2023 ftunivdesarrollo https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011051 2024-06-10T14:11:04Z Background: Scrub typhus is a potentially severe infection caused by bacteria of the genus Orientia, endemic in Asia-Pacific and recently discovered in southern Chile. The presented study aimed to determine the prevalence and species richness of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and their infection with Orientia spp. in different areas of two regions in southern Chile. Methodology/principal findings: During summer 2020, trombiculid mites were collected from rodents captured in three areas in southern Chile known to be endemic for scrub typhus (Cochamó and Chiloé Island in the Los Lagos Region and Tortel in the Aysén Region). A total of 132 rodents belonging to five species were captured using Sherman-like traps; 89.4% were infested with trombiculids. Mite specimens were morphologically identified and subsequently tested by Orientia-specific qPCR. Six mite species were identified. Among chigger-infested rodents, 33.9% carried Orientia-positive mites; this rate was higher in Tortel (63.8%) than in Cochamó (45.0%) and Chiloé Island (2.0%). The analysis of individual mites (n = 901) revealed that 31.2% of Herpetacarus antarctica samples (n = 202) were positive for Orientia DNA; the prevalence was 7.0% in Paratrombicula neuquenensis (n = 213), 6.9% in Herpetacarus eloisae (n = 144), 3.6% in Argentinacarus expansus (n = 55), and 0% in Paratrombicula goffi (n = 110) and Quadraseta chiloensis (n = 177). The southernmost site (Tortel) showed the highest rates of trombiculid infestation, trombiculid load, and Orientia infection in the captured rodents. Conclusions/significance: Our study provides new insights into the trombiculid fauna and prevalence of Orientia in mites collected from wild rodents in southern Chile. Orientia DNA was detected in four of the six mite species. Rates of infestation, mite loads, and Orientia prevalences differed geographically and were highest in the Aysén Region. Our data improve our knowledge on possible vectors of scrub typhus and their distribution in Chile. Publicada Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica Mite Repositorio Universidad del Desarrollo (UDD) Chiloé ENVELOPE(-63.983,-63.983,-65.517,-65.517) Pacific PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases 17 1 e0011051
institution Open Polar
collection Repositorio Universidad del Desarrollo (UDD)
op_collection_id ftunivdesarrollo
language English
topic Chile / epidemiology
Orientia tsutsugamushi / genetics
Rodentia
Scrub Typhus / epidemiology
Scrub Typhus / microbiology
Trombiculidae / microbiology
Animals
spellingShingle Chile / epidemiology
Orientia tsutsugamushi / genetics
Rodentia
Scrub Typhus / epidemiology
Scrub Typhus / microbiology
Trombiculidae / microbiology
Animals
Silva, María
Pérez, Caricia
Martínez, Constanza
Pérez, Ruth
Vial Cox, María Cecilia
Stekolnikov, Alexandr
Abarca, Katia
Thomas Weitzel
Weitzel, Thomas
Acosta, Gerardo
Eco-epidemiology of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and infection with Orientia spp. in Southern Chile
topic_facet Chile / epidemiology
Orientia tsutsugamushi / genetics
Rodentia
Scrub Typhus / epidemiology
Scrub Typhus / microbiology
Trombiculidae / microbiology
Animals
description Background: Scrub typhus is a potentially severe infection caused by bacteria of the genus Orientia, endemic in Asia-Pacific and recently discovered in southern Chile. The presented study aimed to determine the prevalence and species richness of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and their infection with Orientia spp. in different areas of two regions in southern Chile. Methodology/principal findings: During summer 2020, trombiculid mites were collected from rodents captured in three areas in southern Chile known to be endemic for scrub typhus (Cochamó and Chiloé Island in the Los Lagos Region and Tortel in the Aysén Region). A total of 132 rodents belonging to five species were captured using Sherman-like traps; 89.4% were infested with trombiculids. Mite specimens were morphologically identified and subsequently tested by Orientia-specific qPCR. Six mite species were identified. Among chigger-infested rodents, 33.9% carried Orientia-positive mites; this rate was higher in Tortel (63.8%) than in Cochamó (45.0%) and Chiloé Island (2.0%). The analysis of individual mites (n = 901) revealed that 31.2% of Herpetacarus antarctica samples (n = 202) were positive for Orientia DNA; the prevalence was 7.0% in Paratrombicula neuquenensis (n = 213), 6.9% in Herpetacarus eloisae (n = 144), 3.6% in Argentinacarus expansus (n = 55), and 0% in Paratrombicula goffi (n = 110) and Quadraseta chiloensis (n = 177). The southernmost site (Tortel) showed the highest rates of trombiculid infestation, trombiculid load, and Orientia infection in the captured rodents. Conclusions/significance: Our study provides new insights into the trombiculid fauna and prevalence of Orientia in mites collected from wild rodents in southern Chile. Orientia DNA was detected in four of the six mite species. Rates of infestation, mite loads, and Orientia prevalences differed geographically and were highest in the Aysén Region. Our data improve our knowledge on possible vectors of scrub typhus and their distribution in Chile. Publicada
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Silva, María
Pérez, Caricia
Martínez, Constanza
Pérez, Ruth
Vial Cox, María Cecilia
Stekolnikov, Alexandr
Abarca, Katia
Thomas Weitzel
Weitzel, Thomas
Acosta, Gerardo
author_facet Silva, María
Pérez, Caricia
Martínez, Constanza
Pérez, Ruth
Vial Cox, María Cecilia
Stekolnikov, Alexandr
Abarca, Katia
Thomas Weitzel
Weitzel, Thomas
Acosta, Gerardo
author_sort Silva, María
title Eco-epidemiology of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and infection with Orientia spp. in Southern Chile
title_short Eco-epidemiology of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and infection with Orientia spp. in Southern Chile
title_full Eco-epidemiology of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and infection with Orientia spp. in Southern Chile
title_fullStr Eco-epidemiology of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and infection with Orientia spp. in Southern Chile
title_full_unstemmed Eco-epidemiology of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and infection with Orientia spp. in Southern Chile
title_sort eco-epidemiology of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and infection with orientia spp. in southern chile
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/11447/9039
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011051
long_lat ENVELOPE(-63.983,-63.983,-65.517,-65.517)
geographic Chiloé
Pacific
geographic_facet Chiloé
Pacific
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Mite
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Mite
op_relation Silva de la Fuente MC, Pérez C, Martínez-Valdebenito C, Pérez R, Vial C, Stekolnikov A, Abarca K, Weitzel T, Acosta-Jamett G. Eco-epidemiology of rodent-associated trombiculid mites and infection with Orientia spp. in Southern Chile. PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2023 Jan 12;17(1):e0011051. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0011051
https://hdl.handle.net/11447/9039
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011051
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011051
container_title PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
container_volume 17
container_issue 1
container_start_page e0011051
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