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"Mason, Kathleen L"
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A U.S. isolate of Theileria orientalis, Ikeda genotype, is transmitted to cattle by the invasive Asian longhorned tick, Haemaphysalis longicornis
2021
Background
Theileria orientalis
is a tick-borne hemoparasite that causes anemia, ill thrift, and death in cattle globally. The Ikeda strain of
T.
orientalis
is more virulent than other strains, leading to severe clinical signs and death of up to 5% of affected animals. Within the Asia–Pacific region, where it affects 25% of Australian cattle,
T.
orientalis
Ikeda has a significant economic impact on the cattle industry. In 2017,
T.
orientalis
Ikeda was detected in a cattle herd in Albermarle County, Virginia, United States. Months earlier, the U.S. was alerted to the invasion of the Asian longhorned tick,
Haemaphysalis longicornis,
throughout the eastern U.S. Abundant
H.
longicornis
ticks were identified on cattle in the
T.
orientalis-
affected herd in VA, and a subset of ticks from the environment were PCR-positive for
T.
orientalis
Ikeda. A strain of
T.
orientalis
from a previous U.S. outbreak was not transmissible by
H.
longicornis
; however,
H.
longicornis
is the primary tick vector of
T.
orientalis
Ikeda in other regions of the world. Thus, the objective of this study was to determine whether invasive
H.
longicornis
ticks in the U.S. are competent vectors of
T.
orientalis
Ikeda.
Methods
Nymphal
H.
longicornis
ticks were fed on a splenectomized calf infected with the VA-U.S.-
T.
orientalis
Ikeda strain. After molting, a subset of adult ticks from this cohort were dissected, and salivary glands assayed for
T.
orientalis
Ikeda via qPCR. The remaining adult ticks from the group were allowed to feed on three calves. Calves were subsequently monitored for
T.
orientalis
Ikeda infection via blood smear cytology and PCR.
Results
After acquisition feeding on a VA-U.S.-
T.
orientalis
Ikeda-infected calf as nymphs, a subset of molted adult tick salivary glands tested positive by qPCR for
T.
orientalis
Ikeda. Adult ticks from the same cohort successfully transmitted
T.
orientalis
Ikeda to 3/3 naïve calves, each of which developed parasitemia reaching 0.4–0.9%.
Conclusions
Our findings demonstrate that U.S.
H.
longicornis
ticks are competent vectors of the VA-U.S.-
T.
orientalis
Ikeda strain. This data provides important information for the U.S. cattle industry regarding the potential spread of this parasite and the necessity of enhanced surveillance and control measures.
Graphical Abstract
Journal Article
Vaccination of cattle with synthetic peptides corresponding to predicted extracellular domains of Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus aquaporin 2 reduced the number of ticks feeding to repletion
by
Olds, Cassandra L.
,
Hussein, Hala E.
,
Scoles, Glen A.
in
Animals
,
Anti-tick vaccine
,
Antibodies
2022
Background
There have been ongoing efforts to identify anti-tick vaccine targets to protect cattle from infestation with cattle fever ticks
Rhipicephalus
(
Boophilus) microplus
. Two commercial vaccines based on the tick gut protein Bm86 have had variable effectiveness, which has led to poor acceptance, and numerous studies have attempted to identify vaccine antigens that will provide more consistently effective protection. Transcriptomic analysis of
R. microplus
led to identification of three aquaporin genes annotated to code for transmembrane proteins involved in the transport of water across cell membranes. Previous work showed that vaccination with full-length recombinant aquaporin 1 (RmAQP1) reduced tick burdens on cattle. Targeted silencing of aquaporin 2 (RmAQP2) expression suggested it might also be a good anti-tick vaccination target.
Methods
Three synthetic peptides from the predicted extracellular domains of RmAQP2 were used to vaccinate cattle. Peptides were conjugated to keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) as an antigenic carrier molecule. We monitored the antibody response with ELISA and challenged vaccinated cattle with
R. microplus
larvae.
Results
There was a 25% reduction overall in the numbers of ticks feeding to repletion on the vaccinated cattle. Immune sera from vaccinated cattle recognized native tick proteins on a western blot and reacted to the three individual synthetic peptides in an ELISA. The vaccinated calf with the highest total IgG titer was not the most effective at controlling ticks; ratios of IgG isotypes 1 and 2 differed greatly among the three vaccinated cattle; the calf with the highest IgG1/IgG2 ratio had the fewest ticks. Ticks on vaccinated cattle had significantly greater replete weights compared to ticks on controls, mirroring results seen with RNA silencing of RmAQP2. However, protein data could not confirm that vaccination had any impact on the ability of the tick to concentrate its blood meal by removing water.
Conclusions
A reduced number of ticks feed successfully on cattle vaccinated to produce antibodies against the extracellular domains of RmAQP2. However, our predicted mechanism, that antibody binding blocks the ability of RmAQP2 to move water out of the blood meal, could not be confirmed. Further study will be required to define the mechanism of action and to determine whether these vaccine targets will be useful components of an anti-tick vaccine cocktail.
Graphical Abstract
Journal Article
Rhipicephalus appendiculatus ticks transmit Theileria parva from persistently infected cattle in the absence of detectable parasitemia: implications for East Coast fever epidemiology
by
Olds, Cassandra L.
,
Scoles, Glen A.
,
Mason, Kathleen L.
in
adults
,
Animals
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2018
Background
East Coast fever (ECF) is a devastating disease of cattle and a significant constraint to improvement of livestock production in sub-Saharan Africa. The protozoan parasite causing ECF,
Theileria parva
, undergoes obligate sexual stage development in its tick vector
Rhipicephalus appendiculatus
. Tick-borne acquisition and transmission occurs transstadially; larval and nymphal ticks acquire infection while feeding and transmit to cattle when they feed after molting to the next stage. Much of the current knowledge relating to tick-borne acquisition and transmission of
T. parva
has been derived from studies performed during acute infections where parasitemia is high. In contrast, tick-borne transmission during the low-level persistent infections characteristic of endemic transmission cycles is rarely studied.
Methods
Cattle were infected with one of two stocks of
T. parva
(Muguga or Marikebuni). Four months post-infection when parasites were no longer detectable in peripheral blood by PCR, 500
R. appendiculatus
nymphs were fed to repletion on each of the cattle. After they molted to the adult stage, 20 or 200 ticks, respectively, were fed on two naïve cattle for each of the parasite stocks. After adult ticks fed to repletion, cattle were tested for
T. parva
infection by nested PCR and dot blot hybridization.
Results
Once they had molted to adults the ticks that had fed as nymphs on Muguga and Marikebuni infected cattle successfully transmitted
Theileria parva
to all naïve cattle, even though
T. parva
infection was not detectable by nested PCR on salivary gland genomic DNA of a sample of individual ticks. However, a salivary gland homogenate from a single Marikebuni infected tick was able to infect primary bovine lymphocytes. Infection was detected by nested p104 PCR in 3 of 4 calves and detected in all 4 calves by
T. parva
18S nested PCR/dot blot hybridization.
Conclusion
We show that
R. appendiculatus
ticks are able to acquire
T. parva
parasites from infected cattle even in the absence of detectable parasitemia. Although infection was undetectable in a sample of individual ticks, cumulatively as few as 20 ticks were able to transmit
T. parva
to naïve cattle. These results have important implications for our understanding of
T. parva
transmission by
R. appendiculatus
in ECF endemic regions.
Journal Article
Evaluation of the Importance of VlsE Antigenic Variation for the Enzootic Cycle of Borrelia burgdorferi
2015
Efficient acquisition and transmission of Borrelia burgdorferi by the tick vector, and the ability to persistently infect both vector and host, are important elements for the life cycle of the Lyme disease pathogen. Previous work has provided strong evidence implicating the significance of the vls locus for B. burgdorferi persistence. However, studies involving vls mutant clones have thus far only utilized in vitro-grown or host-adapted spirochetes and laboratory strains of mice. Additionally, the effects of vls mutation on tick acquisition and transmission has not yet been tested. Thus, the importance of VlsE antigenic variation for persistent infection of the natural reservoir host, and for the B. burgdorferi enzootic life cycle in general, has not been examined to date. In the current work, Ixodes scapularis and Peromyscus maniculatus were infected with different vls mutant clones to study the importance of the vls locus for the enzootic cycle of the Lyme disease pathogen. The findings highlight the significance of the vls system for long-term infection of the natural reservoir host, and show that VlsE antigenic variability is advantageous for efficient tick acquisition of B. burgdorferi from the mammalian reservoir. The data also indicate that the adaptation state of infecting spirochetes influences B. burgdorferi avoidance from host antibodies, which may be in part due to its respective VlsE expression levels. Overall, the current findings provide the most direct evidence on the importance of VlsE for the enzootic cycle of Lyme disease spirochetes, and underscore the significance of VlsE antigenic variation for maintaining B. burgdorferi in nature.
Journal Article
Laboratory colonization stabilizes the naturally dynamic microbiome composition of field collected Dermacentor andersoni ticks
2017
Background
Nearly a quarter of emerging infectious diseases identified in the last century are arthropod-borne. Although ticks and insects can carry pathogenic microorganisms, non-pathogenic microbes make up the majority of their microbial communities. The majority of tick microbiome research has had a focus on discovery and description; very few studies have analyzed the ecological context and functional responses of the bacterial microbiome of ticks. The goal of this analysis was to characterize the stability of the bacterial microbiome of
Dermacentor andersoni
ticks between generations and two populations within a species.
Methods
The bacterial microbiome of
D. andersoni
midguts and salivary glands was analyzed from populations collected at two different ecologically distinct sites by comparing field (F1) and lab-reared populations (F1-F3) over three generations. The microbiome composition of pooled and individual samples was analyzed by sequencing nearly full-length 16S rRNA gene amplicons using a Pacific Biosciences CCS platform that allows identification of bacteria to the species level.
Findings
In this study, we found that the
D. andersoni
microbiome was distinct in different geographic populations and was tissue specific, differing between the midgut and the salivary gland, over multiple generations. Additionally, our study showed that the microbiomes of laboratory-reared populations were not necessarily representative of their respective field populations. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the microbiome of a few individual ticks does not represent the microbiome composition at the population level.
Conclusions
We demonstrated that the bacterial microbiome of
D. andersoni
was complex over three generations and specific to tick tissue (midgut vs. salivary glands) as well as geographic location (Burns, Oregon vs. Lake Como, Montana vs. laboratory setting). These results provide evidence that habitat of the tick population is a vital component of the complexity of the bacterial microbiome of ticks, and that the microbiome of lab colonies may not allow for comparative analyses with field populations. A broader understanding of microbiome variation will be required if we are to employ manipulation of the microbiome as a method for interfering with acquisition and transmission of tick-borne pathogens.
Journal Article
The bacterial microbiome of Dermacentor andersoni ticks influences pathogen susceptibility
2016
Ticks are of medical importance owing to their ability to transmit pathogens to humans and animals. The Rocky Mountain wood tick,
Dermacentor andersoni
, is a vector of a number of pathogens, including
Anaplasma marginale,
which is the most widespread tick-borne pathogen of livestock. Although ticks host pathogenic bacteria, they also harbor bacterial endosymbionts that have a role in tick physiology, survival, as well as pathogen acquisition and transmission. The goal of this study was to characterize the bacterial microbiome and examine the impact of microbiome disruption on pathogen susceptibility. The bacterial microbiome of two populations of
D. andersoni
with historically different susceptibilities to
A. marginale
was characterized. In this study, the microbiome was disrupted and then ticks were exposed to
A. marginale
or
Francisella novicida
to determine whether the microbiome correlated with pathogen susceptibility. Our study showed that an increase in proportion and quantity of
Rickettsia bellii
in the microbiome was negatively correlated to
A. marginale
levels in ticks. Furthermore, a decrease in
Francisella
endosymbionts was associated with lower
F. novicida
infection levels, demonstrating a positive pathogen–endosymbiont relationship. We demonstrate that endosymbionts and pathogens have varying interactions, and suggest that microbiome manipulation may provide a possible method for biocontrol by decreasing pathogen susceptibility of ticks.
Journal Article
Tick extracellular vesicles enable arthropod feeding and promote distinct outcomes of bacterial infection
2021
Extracellular vesicles are thought to facilitate pathogen transmission from arthropods to humans and other animals. Here, we reveal that pathogen spreading from arthropods to the mammalian host is multifaceted. Extracellular vesicles from
Ixodes scapularis
enable tick feeding and promote infection of the mildly virulent rickettsial agent
Anaplasma phagocytophilum
through the SNARE proteins Vamp33 and Synaptobrevin 2 and dendritic epidermal T cells. However, extracellular vesicles from the tick
Dermacentor andersoni
mitigate microbial spreading caused by the lethal pathogen
Francisella tularensis
. Collectively, we establish that tick extracellular vesicles foster distinct outcomes of bacterial infection and assist in vector feeding by acting on skin immunity. Thus, the biology of arthropods should be taken into consideration when developing strategies to control vector-borne diseases.
Extracellular vesicles have been implicated in the transmission of pathogens from the arthropod to the human host. Here the authors show that tick-derived extracellular vesicles play a role in feeding and modulate the outcome of bacterial infection.
Journal Article