Article
Hepatozoon Infecting Bats in the Southeastern Brazilian Rainforest
Registro en:
SANTOS, Elizabeth C. F. et al. Hepatozoon infecting bats in the Southeastern Brazilian rainforest. Journal of Wildlife Diseases, v. 56, n. 3, p. 1-6, 2020.
0090-3558
10.7589/2019-08-216
1943-3700
Autor
Santos, Elizabeth C. F.
Martiniano, Nicole O. Moura
Vilela, Roberto V.
Lucio, Camila S.
Silva, Ademar F.
Oliveira, Stefan V.
Gazêta, Gilberto S.
Resumen
Tick-borne protozoans of the genus Hepatozoon are obligate hemoparasites that can infect domestic and wild terrestrial vertebrates. Main hepatozoonosis affects canids and involves mainly Hepatozoon canis and Hepatozoon americanum. However, molecular studies revealed the capacity of H. canis to infect a wide range of wild mammals. In July 2018, we conducted an epidemiological survey for tick-borne pathogens in wild hosts, assaying Hepatozoon sp. occurrence of in 34 bats captured in different habitats within a conservation unit in the state of Espírito Santo, southeastern Brazil. Blood and spleen tissue DNA samples were submitted to PCR amplifications of Babesia/Theileria and Hepatozoon 18S rRNA gene and 21% (7/34) were positive for Hepatozoon sp. Phylogenetic inferences grouped the obtained sequences from Seba's short-tailed bat (Carollia perspicillata) with the H. canis cluster, and from the great fruit-eating bat (Artibeus lituratus) with rodent-associated Hepatozoon cluster. Further studies are needed to characterize the epidemiological role of Seba's short-tailed bat and the great fruit-eating bat in the wild transmission cycle of these hemoparasites in Brazil.