PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Mar 2023)

Co-infection of tick-borne bacterial pathogens in ticks in Inner Mongolia, China.

  • Dan Liu,
  • Wulantuya,
  • Hongxia Fan,
  • Xiaona Li,
  • Fangchao Li,
  • Ting Gao,
  • Xuhong Yin,
  • Zitong Zhang,
  • Minzhi Cao,
  • Hiroki Kawabata,
  • Kozue Sato,
  • Norio Ohashi,
  • Shuji Ando,
  • Gaowa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011121
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 3
p. e0011121

Abstract

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Tick-borne infectious diseases pose a serious health threat in certain regions of the world. Emerging infectious diseases caused by novel tick-borne pathogens have been reported that are causing particular concern. Several tick-borne diseases often coexist in the same foci, and a single vector tick can transmit two or more pathogens at the same time, which greatly increases the probability of co-infection in host animals and humans and can lead to an epidemic of tick-borne disease. The lack of epidemiological data and information on the specific clinical symptoms related to co-infection with tick-borne pathogens means that it is not currently possible to accurately and rapidly distinguish between a single pathogen infection and co-infection with multiple pathogens, which can have serious consequences. Inner Mongolia in the north of China is endemic for tick-borne infectious diseases, especially in the eastern forest region. Previous studies have found that more than 10% of co-infections were in host-seeking ticks. However, the lack of data on the specific types of co-infection with pathogens makes clinical treatment difficult. In our study, we present data on the co-infection types and the differences in co-infection among different ecological regions through genetic analysis of tick samples collected throughout Inner Mongolia. Our findings may aid clinicians in the diagnosis of concomitant tick-borne infectious diseases.