International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Mar 2023)

Multiple Orientia clusters and Th1-skewed chemokine profile: a cross-sectional study in patients with scrub typhus from Nepal

  • Carina Chan-Song Münch,
  • Bishnu Prashad Upadhaya,
  • Binod Rayamajhee,
  • Anurag Adhikari,
  • Manuel Münch,
  • Nora En-Nosse,
  • Katharina Kowalski,
  • Markus Eickmann,
  • Christian Bauer,
  • Krishna Das Manandhar,
  • Christian Keller

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 128
pp. 78 – 87

Abstract

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Objectives: Scrub typhus is an emerging infectious disease in Asia caused by Orientia tsutsugamushi (Ot). From Nepal, only scant data on the genetic epidemiology of this agent is available, and determinants of immunoregulation are poorly understood. Methods: Patients (n = 238) referred to the National Public Health Laboratory (Kathmandu, Nepal) from all over Nepal for suspected scrub typhus were enrolled upon positive immunoglobulin (Ig)M testing between July and October 2015. From Ot 16S and 47 kD polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-positive samples, the variable domain I of the 56 kD gene was sequenced and phylogenetically analyzed. T helper (Th) cell-associated cytokines (n = 13) and chemokines (n = 12) were quantified by multiplex bead arrays. Results: In 93/238 (39.1%) IgM-positive samples, Ot DNA was detected by quantitative PCR. Phylogenetic analysis of 56 kD sequences revealed seven distinct clusters, six of them with high homologies to strains detected in other countries. The Th1-related cytokines interferon-γ and C-X-C motif chemokine ligand 10 were strongly upregulated and correlated with bacteremia, while levels of Th2-associated chemokines were reduced. Bacteremia also correlated with concentrations of interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-10 but not tumor necrosis factor-α. Conclusion: We identified a considerable genetic heterogeneity of human-pathogenic Ot strains circulating in Nepal. Acute Nepalese scrub typhus patients showed strong Th1 but impaired Th2 responses, especially on the chemokine level.

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