| Literature DB >> 32974747 |
Ugo Araújo Souza1,2, Anelise Webster3, Bruno Dall'Agnol3, Ana Paula Morel3, Felipe Bortolotto Peters4,5, Marina Ochoa Favarini4,5, Fábio Dias Mazim5,6, José Bonifácio Garcia Soares6, Flavia Pereira Tirelli5,7, Marcos Adriano Tortato8, Elba Regina Sampaio de Lemos9, Tatiane Campos Trigo5,10, João Fabio Soares11, José Reck3.
Abstract
The genus Bartonella comprises emerging bacteria that affect humans and other mammals worldwide. Felids represent an important reservoir for several Bartonella species. Domestic cats are the main reservoir of Bartonella henselae, the agent of cat scratch disease (CSD). It can be transmitted directly by scratches and bites from infected cats and via cat fleas. This study aims to investigate the circulation of Bartonella spp. in free-ranging Neotropical wild felids from Southern Brazil using serological and molecular methods. In this study, 53 live-trapped free-ranging wild felids were sampled, 39 Leopardus geoffroyi and 14 Leopardus wiedii, from five municipalities in the Rio Grande, do Sul state, southern Brazil. All captured animals were clinically healthy. Two blood samples of L. geoffroyi were positive, by PCR, for the presence of B. henselae DNA. Conversely, none of L. wiedii blood samples were positive when tested using PCR. Indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA) showed that 28% of serum samples of wild felids were reactive (seropositive) for B. henselae by immunofluorescence, with titers ranging from 64 to 256. The results presented here provide the first evidence of a Bartonella-enzootic cycle involving L. geoffroyi and L. wiedii, which may account for the spillover of the emerging zoonotic pathogen B. henselae for the indigenous fauna in Southern Brazil.Entities:
Keywords: Bartonella; Bartonellosis; Neotropical felids; Rio Grande do Sul; Wild cats
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32974747 DOI: 10.1007/s00248-020-01601-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Ecol ISSN: 0095-3628 Impact factor: 4.552