A divergent Anaplasma phagocytophilum variant in an Ixodes tick from a migratory bird; Mediterranean basin

Infect Ecol Epidemiol. 2020 Mar 15;10(1):1729653. doi: 10.1080/20008686.2020.1729653. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Anaplasma phagocytophilum (AP) has vast geographical and host ranges and causes disease in humans and domesticated animals. We investigated the role of northward migratory birds in the dispersal of tick-borne AP in the African-Western Palearctic. Ticks were collected from northward migratory birds trapped during spring migration of 2010 at two localities in the central Mediterranean Sea. AP DNA was detected by PCR (gltA and 16S rRNA) and variant determination was performed using ankA sequences. In total, 358 ticks were collected. One of 19 ticks determined as Ixodes was confirmed positive for AP DNA. The tick was collected from a woodchat shrike (Lanius senator senator) trapped in Greece, and molecularly determined to belong to the I. ricinus complex and sharing highest (95%) 16S RNA sequence identity to I. gibbosus. The ankA AP sequence exhibited highest similarity to sequences from rodents and shrews (82%) and ruminants (80%). Phylogenetic analyses placed it convincingly outside other clades, suggesting that it represents a novel AP variant. The divergent Ixodes species harboring a novel AP variant could either indicate an enzootic cycle involving co-evolution with birds, or dissemination from other regions by avian migration. None of the 331 Hyalomma marginatum sensu lato ticks, all immature stages, were positive for AP DNA, lending no evidence for the involvement of Hyalomma ticks transported by birds in the ecology of AP.

Keywords: 16s rRNA; African-Western Palearctic region; Anaplasma phagocytophilum; Bird migration; Hyalomma marginatum s.l.; Ixodes; ankA.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by ALF grants from Uppsala University Hospital, the EU Interreg V program ScandTick Innovation, project ID 20200422, reference no 2015-000167, and by the Medical Research Council of Southeast Sweden (FORSS, 657881). Furthermore, TGTJ’s research on ticks and tick-borne pathogens is supported by Carl Tryggers stiftelse, Helge Ax:son Johnsons stiftelse, Längmanska kulturfonden, and Magnus Bergvalls stiftelse, all in Stockholm, Sweden. Antikythira Bird Observatory is run by the Hellenic Ornithological Society/Birdlife Greece and is funded from the A.G. and A.P Leventis Foundation. EU-Interreg North Sea Region project NorthTick ref no: J-No.: 38-2-7-19.