| Literature DB >> 25706653 |
Cara E Brook1, Ying Bai2, Andrew P Dobson1, Lynn M Osikowicz2, Hafaliana C Ranaivoson3, Qiyun Zhu4, Michael Y Kosoy2, Katharina Dittmar4.
Abstract
We captured, ectoparasite-combed, and blood-sampled cave-roosting Madagascan fruit bats (Eidolon dupreanum) and tree-roosting Madagascan flying foxes (Pteropus rufus) in four single-species roosts within a sympatric geographic foraging range for these species in central Madagascar. We describe infection with novel Bartonella spp. in sampled Eidolon dupreanum and associated bat flies (Cyclopodia dubia), which nest close to or within major known Bartonella lineages; simultaneously, we report the absence of Bartonella spp. in Thaumapsylla sp. fleas collected from these same bats. This represents the first documented finding of Bartonella infection in these species of bat and bat fly, as well as a new geographic record for Thaumapsylla sp. We further relate the absence of both Bartonella spp. and ectoparasites in sympatrically sampled Pteropus rufus, thus suggestive of a potential role for bat flies in Bartonella spp. transmission. These findings shed light on transmission ecology of bat-borne Bartonella spp., recently demonstrated as a potentially zoonotic pathogen.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25706653 PMCID: PMC4337899 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Sites of bat collection, showing numbers of bats collected.
Madagascar, 2013.
Ectoparasites and Bartonella spp. in Madagascar fruit bats.
| Ectoparasite presence |
| |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bat species | Locality |
|
| In bat host | In | In |
|
| Angavobe | 7/24 (29.2) | 0/24 (0) | 8/24 (33.3) | 2/2 (100) | — |
| Angavokely | 20/23 (87.0) | 10/23 (43.5) | 13/23 (56.5) | 15/17 (88.2) | 0/6 (0) | |
|
| Marovitsika | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0/12 (0) | — | — |
| Ambakoana | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0/17 (0) | — | — | |
*Between site differences statistically significant via chi-squared test for independence (X2 = 13.768, df = 1, p = 0.0002;) and Fisher’s exact test (p = 8.828e-05)
Between site differences statistically significant via chi-squared test for independence (X2 = 10.7863, df = 1, p-value = 0.001) and Fisher’s exact test (p = 0.0002)
Table data indicate number positive/number sampled (%) for ectoparasite presence and Bartonella spp. prevalence (both in bat host and in hosted ectoparasites) for E. dupreanum and P. rufus.
Fig 2Venn-diagrams of infection/co-infection with bat flies, bat fleas, and Bartonella spp. across roosting sites for Eidolon dupreanum:
(A) Angavobe, N = 24; (B) Angavokely, N = 24. Both raw numbers of infected individuals and prevalence (%) are indicated. Note that all sampled P. rufus from both Marovitsika and Ambakoana were negative for all infections (i.e. bat flies, bat fleas, and Bartonella spp.).
Fig 3Maximum likelihood phylogeny of representative gltA genes of Rhizobiales (ingroup: Bartonella spp.) (RAxML, GTR+G model, partitioned by codon position) (12).
KEL & ANGB—Madagascar samples. Blue: ex. Eidolon dupreanum (bat), Black: ex. Cyclopodia dubia (bat fly). RED comparative sequence ex. Cyclopodia dubia (bat fly) (9).