4.4 Article

Cultivable internal bacterial flora of ticks isolated in Hungary

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL AND APPLIED ACAROLOGY
Volume 63, Issue 1, Pages 107-122

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10493-013-9762-y

Keywords

Tick species; Cultivable bacteria; 16S rRNA gene PCR; Anaerobic bacteria; Human infections

Categories

Funding

  1. Hungarian National Research Fund OTKA [K81258]

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From six sampling sites in north-western Hungary 126 questing ticks of three species (Ixodes ricinus, Dermacentor reticulatus, Haemaphysalis concinna) were sampled. After inactivating the external bacteria on the surface of ticks, the internal bacterial flora was cultured (two kinds of agar media at three temperatures with aerobic and anaerobic conditions were applied), and 116 strains were isolated. Our results showed, that after a blood meal the bacterial contamination of ticks was much higher in Ixodes and Dermacentor, than in Haemaphysalis, indicating different host range or blood meal habits. Most (89.7 %) of the bacteria were Gram-positive, the most frequent genera were the Staphylococcus (18.1 %) and Bacillus (7.8 %). The percentage of bacteria part of the skin and mucosal flora was 21.6 %. Among the environmental bacteria 14 were found with reported medical importance. The results show, that members of some genera are able to replicate inside the ticks (Mycobacterium, Bacillus) which can increase their potential risk. Isolated bacteria/tick ratio continuously grew from larvae to adults, indicating that larvae probably are hatched sterile, but later bacterial uptake from the environment and from the hosts increases bacterial contamination. Ten anaerobic bacteria were cultured, mostly Propionibacterium acnes, a facultative skin pathogen. No significant differences were found between the isolated bacteria of the six sampling sites. Our work showed, that internal bacterial community of ticks is diverse, novel strains were isolated several with medical importance, some bacteria multiplicate inside ticks, and that ticks continuously take up bacteria from the environment. Our study first described anaerobic bacteria from ticks.

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