| Literature DB >> 27724937 |
Mario Alvarado-Rybak1,2, Laia Solano-Gallego3, Javier Millán4.
Abstract
Piroplasmids are tick-borne protozoan parasites that infect blood cells (erythrocytes, lymphocytes or other leukocytes) or endothelial cells of numerous wild and domestic vertebrates worldwide. They cause severe disease in livestock, dogs, cats, wild mammals and, occasionally, in humans. Piroplasmid infections are prevalent in wild carnivores worldwide although there is limited information about their clinical and epidemiological importance. There are currently nine recognized species of Babesia, two of Theileria, two of Cytauxzoon and one of Rangelia infecting captive and wild carnivores, including members of Canidae, Felidae, Mustelidae, Procyonidae, Ursidae, Viverridae, Hyaenidae and Herpestidae in the Americas, Eurasia and Africa. However, the number of piroplasmid species is likely higher than currently accepted due to the reported existence of DNA sequences that may correspond to new species and the lack of studies on many host species and biogeographical areas. Indeed, many species have been recognized in the last few years with the advancement of molecular analyses. Disease and mortality have been documented in some wild carnivores, whereas other species appear to act as natural, subclinical reservoirs. Various factors (e.g. unnatural hosts, stress due to captivity, habitat degradation, climate fluctuation or immunosuppression) have been associated with disease susceptibility to piroplasmid infections in some species in captivity. We aimed to review the current knowledge on the epidemiology of piroplasmid infections in wild carnivores and associated tick vectors. Emphasis is given to the role of wild carnivores as reservoirs of clinical piroplasmosis for domestic dogs and cats, and to the importance of piroplasmids as disease agents for endangered carnivores.Entities:
Keywords: Babesia; Cytauxzoon; Dog and cat; Piroplasmids; Rangelia; Theileria; Wild carnivores
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27724937 PMCID: PMC5057422 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-016-1808-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1Distribution map of piroplasmid infection in wild carnivores worldwide. (1) High prevalence of Babesia microti-like group in red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) in Europe suggests that this species may be acting as a sylvatic reservoir for these species, or may even be the natural host of the parasite. (2) A canine distemper epidemic among Serengeti lions (Panthera leo) was associated with high levels of Babesia during the 1994 and 2001 outbreaks. (3) Raccoons (Procyon lotor) in USA and Japan may be uncontrolled reservoirs of Babesia sp. and may also participate in the dynamics of human babesiosis caused by B. microti as dispersors of infected ticks. (4) Bobcats (Lynx rufus) and probably (5) cougars (Puma concolor) are the reservoirs of Cytauxzoon felis in North America. (6) The Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus) is a natural host for Cytauxzoon spp. in the Iberian Peninsula, but due to its reduced population size cannot be considered a relevant reservoir of the parasite. (7) Brazilian wild felids, such as the jaguar (Panthera onca), may also be natural hosts for Cytauxzoon sp. because infection is never related to the presence of clinical signs. (8) Pallas's cats (Otocolobus manul) imported into Oklahoma from Mongolia were found to be infected with intraerythrocytic piroplasms, and DNA sequencing revealed a novel organism, Cytauxzoon manul. (9) A meerkat population in South Africa was found to be frequently infected with Babesia and Cytauxzoon without showing signs of disease. (10) An Asiatic wildcat (Felis silvestris ornata) was found suffering from clinical signs of cytauxzoonosis in Iran
Molecular and serological studies performed on Babesia spp. and Theileria spp. infections in wild carnivores
| Host | Reported prevalence | Targeted agent | Country/Region | Sample origin | Observation | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (positive/ | Technique | ||||||
| Canidae | |||||||
| Bush dog ( | 29.0 (8/27) | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| Coyote ( | 0/12 | PCR |
| USA | W | [ | |
| Crab-eating fox ( | 5.0 (2/39) | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| Fennec fox ( | (1/11) | PCR |
| North Africa | W | [ | |
| Golden jackal ( | 0/32 | PCR |
| North Africa | W | [ | |
| Grey fox ( | 26.0 (8/31) | PCR |
| USA | W | [ | |
| Hoary fox ( | 0/7 | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| Maned wolf ( | 0/21 | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| Pale fox ( | 4.0 (1/28) | PCR |
| North Africa | W | [ | |
| Racoon dog ( | (3/14) | PCR |
| South Korea | W | Emaciated. One with severe tick infestation | [ |
| Red fox ( | 1.1 (1/91) | PCR |
| Portugal | W | [ | |
| 0.7 (1/138) | PCR |
| Northeastern Poland | W | [ | ||
| 0/13 | PCR |
| Sicily, Italy | W | [ | ||
| 0/16 | PCR |
| North Africa | W | [ | ||
| 0.8 (1/119) | PCR |
| Bosnia | W | [ | ||
| 50.0 (10/20) | PCR |
| Spain | W | [ | ||
| (1/2) | PCR |
| Italy | W | [ | ||
| (1/5) | PCR |
| Spain | W | [ | ||
| 37.0 (58/158) | PCR |
| USA | W | [ | ||
| (1/1) | PCR |
| Prince Edward Island, Canada | W | Weakness, anemia, non-suppurative meningoencephalitis, bronchopneumonia and vacuolar hepatopathy | [ | |
| 5.2 (10/191) | PCR |
| Croatia | W | [ | ||
| 0.5 (1/191) | PCR |
| Croatia | W | [ | ||
| 69.2 (63/91) | PCR |
| Portugal | W | [ | ||
| 50.0 (18/36) | PCR |
| Austria | W | [ | ||
| 46.0 (121/261) | PCR |
| Thuringia, Germany | W | Carcasses with high infestations of ticks | [ | |
| 0.98 (2/205) | PCR |
| Italy | W | [ | ||
| 20.0 (81/404) | PCR |
| Hungary | W | [ | ||
| 31.9 (38/119) | PCR |
| Bosnia | W | 9.2 % co-infection with | [ | |
| (2/12) | PCR |
| Catalonia, Spain | W | One fox co-infected with | [ | |
| 14.6 (46/360) | PCR |
| W/R | [ | |||
| Ruppell fox ( | 0/11 | PCR |
| North Africa | W | [ | |
| Side-striped jackal ( | 0/2 | PCR |
| North Africa | W | [ | |
| Wild dog ( | 5.3 (16/301) | PCR |
| South Africa | W | [ | |
| 0/11 | PCR |
| Zambia | W | Co-infection with | [ | |
| Wolf ( | 0/7 | PCR |
| Italy | W | [ | |
| 0/3 | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | ||
| (2/12) | PCR |
| Budapest, Hungary | R | Good body condition. Necropsy with severe jaudice, liver, gall bladder and spleen enlarged | [ | |
| 0/7 | PCR |
| Italy | W | [ | ||
| Ursidae | |||||||
| Hokkaido brown bear ( | (1/1) | PCR |
| Hokkaido, Japan | W | Heavily infested with ticks and anemia. Co-infection with | [ |
| Japanese black bear ( | 14.1 (22/156) | PCR |
| Iwate, Japan | W | 76.3 % co-infection with | [ |
| Procyonidae | |||||||
| Raccoon ( | 8.3 (2/24) | PCR |
| Hokkaido, Japan | W | All have splenomegaly | [ |
| (1/1) | PCR |
| Illinois, USA | W | Anemia | [ | |
| 90.0 (37/41) | PCR |
| North Carolina, USA | W | 67 % co-infection with | [ | |
| 83.0 (34/41) | PCR |
| North Carolina, USA | W | 76 % co-infection with | [ | |
| 1.7 (6/348) | PCR |
| Hokkaido, Japan | W | Heavily infested with ticks | [ | |
| (14/17) | PCR |
| Florida, USA | W | [ | ||
| White-nosed coatis ( | 100 (20) | PCR |
| Costa Rica | W | [ | |
| Mustelidae | |||||||
| American mink ( | (13/13) | PCR |
| Hokkaido, Japan | W | [ | |
| Badger ( | (1/5) | PCR |
| Burgos, Spain | W | [ | |
| North American river otter ( | 82.0 (32/39) | PCR |
| North Carolina, USA | W | Wild-caught | [ |
| Stone marten ( | (1/10) | PCR |
| Catalonia, Spain | W | Co-infection with | [ |
| Felidae | |||||||
| Black-footed cat ( | (5/8) | PCR |
| Swaziland, Southern Africa | R | [ | |
| Caracal ( | (1/1) | PCR |
| Durban, South Africa | W | Found ill with clinical sign of feline babesiosis | [ |
| 0/2 | PCR |
| Swaziland, Southern Africa | W | [ | ||
| 0/1 | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | ||
| Cheetah ( | 19.0 (18/97) | PCR |
| Namibia | R | [ | |
| 6.1 (3/49) | PCR |
| Namibia | W | [ | ||
| 3.0 (3/97) | PCR |
| Namibia | R | [ | ||
| 28.5 (39/137) | D/PCR |
| South Africa | R | [ | ||
| (5/5) | PCR |
| Salama-Malili ranch, Kenia | R | Subclinical | [ | |
| 0/5 | PCR |
| Salama-Malili ranch, Kenia | R | Subclinical | [ | |
| (4/4) | PCR |
| Zimbabwe | R | [ | ||
| Fishing cat ( | 0/1 | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| Jaguar ( | (6/13) | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| Leopard ( | (1/1) | PCR |
| Namibia, Swaziland, South Africa | R | [ | |
| (2/2) | PCR |
| Nairobi National Park, Kenya | R | Subclinical | [ | |
| 0/1 | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | ||
| Lion ( | (16/16) | D/PCR |
| Kruger National Park, South Africa | W | Blood samples | [ |
| 12.0 (3/25) | PCR |
| Swaziland, Southern Africa | R | Co-infection with | [ | |
| 25.0 (14/56) | PCR |
| Swaziland, Southern Africa | W | Co-infection with | [ | |
| 12.0 (3/25) | PCR |
| Swaziland, Southern Africa | R | [ | ||
| 1.7 (1/56) | PCR |
| Swaziland, Southern Africa | W | [ | ||
| 89.5 (238/266) | PCR |
| Serengeti | W | 1994 Canine distemper virus epidemic | [ | |
| 97.0 (34/35) | PCR |
| Ngorongoro | W | 2001 Canine distemper virus epidemic | [ | |
| 0/12 | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | ||
| (2/2) | D/PCR |
| Nairobi Orphanage, Kenya | R | Anemia, lethargy, wobble movement and dry eyes | [ | |
| 12.0 (10/86) | PCR |
| Zimbabwe | R | [ | ||
| 59.0 (51/86) | PCR |
| Zimbabwe | R | [ | ||
| 25.0 (6/24) | PCR |
| Zambia | W | Co-infection with | [ | |
| 25.0 (6/24) | PCR |
| Zambia | W | Co-infection with | [ | |
| 1.0 (1/86) | PCR |
| Zimbabwe | R | [ | ||
| 1.0 (1/86) | PCR |
| Zimbabwe | R | [ | ||
| Little spotted cat ( | 24.0 (9/38) | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| Margay ( | (2/4) | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| Ocelot ( | 60.0 (26/43) | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| Pampas cat ( | (3/5) | IFAT/PCR |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| Puma ( | 78.0 (32/41) | PCR |
| Florida, USA | W | 5 % co-infection with | [ |
| (2/18) | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | ||
| Tiger ( | 0/6 | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| Serval ( | (1/3) | PCR |
| Swaziland, Southern Africa | R | [ | |
| (2/2) | PCR |
| Zimbabwe | R | [ | ||
| 0/1 | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | ||
| Wild cat ( | (6/6) | PCR |
| Zimbabwe | R | [ | |
| Yaguarundi ( | 25.0 (6/25) | IFAT |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| Viverridae | |||||||
| Common genet ( | (1/2) | IFAT/PCR |
| Brazil | Z | [ | |
| 0/34 | PCR |
| Catalonia, Spain | W | [ | ||
| Hyaenidae | |||||||
| Spotted hyena (C | (6/19) | PCR |
| Zambia | W | Co-infection with | [ |
| Herpestidae | |||||||
| South-African meerkats ( | 80.0 (37/46) | D/PCR |
| Kalahari, South Africa | W | 46 % of co-infection with | [ |
aWe used the name Babesia microti-like for all isolates belonging to the B. microti group and reported by their authors as B. microti-like, "T. annae", "B. annae" or "B. vulpes"
Abbreviations: D direct examination of smear, H histology, IFAT Indirect Fluorescent Antibody Test, PCR Polymerase Chain Reaction, Z Zoo collection, R rehabilitation center, W wild animal
Molecular studies of Rangelia vitalii and Cytauxzoon sp. infections in wild carnivores
| Host | Reported prevalence | Targeted agent | Country/Region | Sample origin | Observation | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (positive/ | Technique | ||||||
| Canidae | |||||||
| Crab-eating fox ( | 30.0 (6/20) | PCR |
| Brazil | W | [ | |
| (1/1) | PCR |
| Brazil | W | Cachexia and intense dehydration, conjunctiva and oral mucosae were distinctly pale. Co-infection with canine distemper virus. | [ | |
| Pampas fox ( | 0/4 | PCR |
| Brazil | W | [ | |
| (1/1) | PCR |
| Brazil | W | Mucosae were moderately pale. Spleen with moderate follicle hyperplasia and extramedullary hematopoiesis. | [ | |
| (1/1) | PCR |
| Brazil | W | Kidney with hyaline degeneration and coagulation necrosis. Liver with slight vacuolar degeneration. Spleen with red pulp hyperplasia. | [ | |
| Ursidae | |||||||
| Hokkaido brown bear ( | (1/1) | PCR |
| Hokkaido, Japan | W | Heavily infested with ticks and anemia. Co-infection with | [ |
| Felidae | |||||||
| Bobcat ( | 33.0 (10/30) | PCR |
| North Carolina, USA | W | Region where cytauxzoonosis is prevalent in domestic cat | [ |
| 7.0 (5/69) | PCR |
| Pennsylvania, USA | W | Region where cytauxzoonosis is not prevalent in domestic cat | [ | |
| 25.6 (34/133) | PCR |
| Arkansas, USA | W | [ | ||
| 20.0 (138/696) | PCR |
| 13 states, USA | W | [ | ||
| 0/1 | PCR |
| USA | R | [ | ||
| Wild cat ( | (1/1) | D/PCR |
| Iran | W | Cachexia and anemia | [ |
| European wildcat ( | 14.3 (3/21) | PCR |
| Italy | W | Road kill animals | [ |
| Iberian lynx ( | 1.9 (1/51) | D/PCR |
| Sierra Morena, Spain | W | One injured young male | [ |
| 15.0 (3/20) | PCR |
| Sierra Morena, Spain | W | [ | ||
| 75.0 (24/32) | PCR |
| Sierra Morena, Spain | W | [ | ||
| 0/45 | PCR |
| Doñana, Spain | W | [ | ||
| 26.9 (25/112) | PCR |
| Sierra Morena, Spain | W/R | 22 % co-infection with | [ | |
| Jaguar ( | (1/6) | PCR |
| Brazil | R | [ | |
| (26/26) | PCR |
| Pantanal, Brazil | W | [ | ||
| Little spotted cat ( | 0/14 | PCR |
| Brazil | R | [ | |
| Lion ( | 0/266 | PCR |
| Serengeti | W | 1994 Canine distemper virus epidemic | [ |
| 0/35 | PCR |
| Ngorongoro | W | 2001 Canine distemper virus epidemic | [ | |
| 0/1 | PCR |
| USA | R | [ | ||
| 2.0 (2/86) | PCR |
| Zimbabwe | R | [ | ||
| Margay ( | 0/2 | PCR |
| Brazil | R | [ | |
| Ocelot ( | 6.8 (2/29) | PCR |
| Brazil | R | [ | |
| Pallas's cat ( | (4/4) | H/D/PCR |
| Mongolia | W | Trapped in Mongolia and transported to USA | [ |
| 0/3 | PCR |
| Brazil | R | [ | ||
| Puma ( | 12.0 (5/41) | PCR |
| Florida, USA | W | 5 % co-infection with | [ |
| (3/3) | D/PCR |
| Florida, USA | R | 1 cougar with anorexia and lethargy. Hematological findings of mild hemolytic anemia | [ | |
| (2/9) | PCR |
| Brazil | R | [ | ||
| (1/7) | PCR |
| USA | R | [ | ||
| 0/1 | PCR |
| USA | R | [ | ||
| Serval ( | 0/1 | PCR |
| USA | R | [ | |
| Tiger ( | (4/8) | PCR |
| USA | Z | [ | |
| Yaguarundi ( | 0/6 | PCR |
| Brazil | R | [ | |
| Viverridae | |||||||
| Common genet ( | 0/10 | PCR |
| Doñana, Spain | W | [ | |
| Herpestidae | |||||||
| Egyptian mongoose ( | 0/24 | PCR |
| Doñana, Spain | W | [ | |
| South African meerkats ( | 57.0 (26/46) | D/PCR |
| Kalahari, South Africa | W | 46 % of co-infection with | [ |
Abbreviations: D direct examination of smear, H histology, IFAT Indirect Fluorescent Antibody Test, PCR Polymerase Chain Reaction, Z Zoo collection, R rehabilitation center, W wild animal
Reported body of evidence of Babesia spp. and Cytauxzoon spp. isolates in ticks found on wild carnivores
| Host from which ticks were retrieved | Reported prevalences | Targeted agent | Tick species | Region/Country | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (positive/ | Technique | |||||
| Canidae | ||||||
| Red fox ( | 1/3 adults | PCR |
|
| Burgos, Spain | [ |
| 0/2 nymphs | PCR |
|
| Burgos, Spain | [ | |
| (8/870) | PCR |
|
| Thuringia, Germany | [ | |
| (19/585) | PCR |
|
| Thuringia, Germany | [ | |
| (13/485) | PCR |
|
| Thuringia, Germany | [ | |
| (4/870) | PCR |
|
| Thuringia, Germany | [ | |
| (1/585) | PCR |
|
| Thuringia, Germany | [ | |
| (1/485) | PCR |
|
| Thuringia, Germany | [ | |
| 1 pool of 20 ticks | PCR |
|
| Catalonia, Spain | [ | |
| Ursidae | ||||||
| Hokkaido brown bear ( | 0/1 | PCR |
|
| Hokkaido, Japan | [ |
| Mephitidae | ||||||
| Striped skunk ( | 19.4 (6/31) | PCR |
|
| New York, USA | [ |
| Procyonidae | ||||||
| Raccoon ( | 23.5 (93/396) | PCR |
|
| New York, USA | [ |
| Felidae | ||||||
| Bobcat ( | na | D |
|
| Oklahoma, USA | [ |
| Lion ( | na | PCR |
|
| Ngorongoro | [ |
| Mustelidae | ||||||
| Stone marten ( | 1 pool of 12 ticks | PCR |
|
| Catalonia, Spain | [ |
| Eurasian badger ( | 1 pool of 18 nymphs | PCR |
|
| Catalonia, Spain | [ |
| Viverridae | ||||||
| Common genet ( | 1 pool of 3 ticks | PCR |
|
| Catalonia, Spain | [ |
aWe used the name Babesia microti-like for all isolates belonging to the B. microti group and reported by their authors as B. microti-like, "T. annae", "B. annae" or "B. vulpes"
Abbreviations: D direct examination of smear, PCR Polymerase Chain Reaction