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Dispatch
Bartonella
spp. DNA Associated with Biting Flies from California
Crystal Y. Chung,* Rickie W. Kasten,* Sandra M. Paff,* Brian A. Van
Horn,* Muriel Vayssier-Taussat,† Henri-Jean Boulouis,† and Bruno B. Chomel*![Comments](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20090117145934im_/http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid/images/email.gif)
*University of California, Davis, California, USA; and †Unité Mixte de
Recherche, Ecole Nationale Veterinaire d'Alfort, Maisons-Alfort, France
Suggested citation
for this article:
Chung CY, Kasten RW, Paff SM, Van Horn BA, Vayssier-Taussat M, Boulouis
H-J, et al. Bartonella spp. DNA associated with biting flies
from California. Emerg Infect Dis. [serial online] 2004 Jul [date
cited]. Available from: http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/EID/vol10no7/03-0896.htm
Bartonella
DNA was investigated in 104 horn flies (Haematobia spp.), 60
stable flies (Stomoxys spp.), 11 deer flies (Chrysops
spp.), and 11 horse flies (Tabanus spp.) collected on cattle
in California. Partial sequencing indicated B. bovis DNA in the
horn fly pool and B. henselae type M DNA in one stable fly.
Bartonella spp. are vector-borne bacteria associated with numerous
emerging infections in humans and animals (1). Four Bartonella
species have been isolated from wild and domestic ruminants. B. schoenbuchensis
and B. capreoli were recovered from wild roe deer (Capreolus
capreolus) (2,3) in Europe, whereas B. bovis
(formerly B. weissii) was recovered from domestic cattle in the
United States and Europe (3–5). Strains similar to B.
bovis and B. capreoli were also isolated from mule deer (Odocoileus
hemionus) and elk (Cervus elaphus) from California (3,4).
Recently, B. chomelii was recovered from bacteremic cows in France
(6). A high prevalence of infection with various Bartonella
species has been reported in domestic and wild ruminants in North America
and Europe (2–4). Of the herds investigated in California,
95% of beef cattle and 17% of dairy cattle were bacteremic for B. bovis
and 90% of the mule deer were bacteremic for Bartonella spp. (4).
The main vector of these ruminant-infecting Bartonella spp. has
not been identified.
The role of ticks as potential vectors for Bartonella in cattle
was investigated (7,8). In Europe, >70% of 121 Ixodes
ricinus ticks collected from roe deer had 16S rRNA gene sequences
for Bartonella or other closely related species (7).
In California, Bartonella DNA was detected in approximately 19%
of 151 questing adult I. pacificus ticks (8),
but the direct role of ticks in Bartonella transmission among ruminants
has never been established. In a search for an efficient Bartonella
vector, which could explain such high prevalence of infection in wild
and domestic ruminants, we tested biting flies for Bartonella spp.
DNA to establish the potential role of biting flies as vectors of Bartonella
in cattle.
The Study
Flies were collected by hand, with a bug net, at various locations on
the University of California campus, mainly the dairy barn, beef barn,
and feedlot, from early July to mid-August 2003. Flies were identified
on the basis of morphologic characteristics visually or under binocular
lenses for the smaller flies by an experienced entomologist. Of the 370
biting flies collected, 104 (62%) of the horn flies (Haematobia
spp.), 60 (33%) of the stable flies (Stomoxys spp.), 11 (92%) of
the deer flies (Chrysops spp.), and 10 (91%) of the horse flies
(Tabanus spp.) were tested for Bartonella DNA. The stable
flies were collected from the dairy and the feedlot barns. The horn flies,
deer flies, and horse flies were collected from the beef barn.
Before DNA extraction, the flies were placed in a sterile 1.5-mL microtube,
washed with 70% ethanol, and rinsed with sterile water. Because of size
differences among the flies, 2–3 horn flies were grouped together in a
single microtube, while each stable fly was placed in an individual vial.
The abdomen of deer flies and horse flies was first removed and then placed
in individual vials. DNA extraction was performed by using the DNeasy
Tissue Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA) according to the manufacturer's instructions,
with some minor adjustments. The amount of reagents for the deer and horse
flies were doubled, and the flies were incubated in a waterbath overnight
at 55°C.
Bartonella DNA was detected by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
using primers for the citrate synthase (gltA) gene, as previously
published (9). Undiluted DNA extracted from the flies
was used as the DNA template. As a positive control, a low concentration
of B. henselae was added to a separate set of the same DNA template.
A negative control was made by using sterile water instead of the DNA
template. Using gel electrophoresis, we analyzed PCR products for the
appearance of an ≈380-bp fragment. Any evidence of a 380-bp fragment
was further analyzed by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP)
procedures, by using TaqI (Promega Corp., Madison, WI), HhaI,
AciI, and MseI endonucleases (New England Biolabs, Beverly,
MA), and DNA sequence analysis (Davis Sequencing, Davis, CA).
Four of the 60 stable flies and one pool (2 flies) of the 45 horn fly
pools showed a 380-bp fragment. PCR/RFLP analysis confirmed Bartonella
DNA in one of the four stable flies and in the horn fly pool. However,
for the three other stable flies, the PCR/RFLP profiles did not match
any known Bartonella digestion profile. The sequence obtained from
the horn fly pool (Haematobia spp.) collected in the beef cattle
barn was identical to that for B. bovis (Figure
1). The sequence obtained from a stable fly (Stomoxys spp.)
collected in the dairy cattle barn was identical to that for B. henselae
type M (Marseille) (Figure 2). The highlighted
area indicates the divergence between B. henselae type H (Houston
I) and B. henselae type M, as previously described (10).
Conclusions
This identification of Bartonella DNA is the first associated
with horn and stable flies and the first identification of B. henselae
from a biting fly. It is also the first report of identification of Bartonella
DNA from flies from North America. This finding demonstrates, as for ticks,
that Bartonella DNA is present in various biting insects. We found
a very low percentage of Bartonella DNA–positive flies, in contrast
to the very high prevalence (57 [88%] of 65 observed in Hippoboscidae
adult flies (Lipoptena cervi and Hippobosca equina) collected
from domestic cattle and wild roe deer in France (H.J. Boulouis, pers.
comm.). This low prevalence may be related to the fact that different
fly species were tested but more likely could be associated with a low
level of Bartonella bacteremia in our herds. In a previous study,
only 17% of cows in a dairy herd were bacteremic (4),
and prevalence was even lower in another dairy herd from Tulare, in the
central valley of California (B.B. Chomel et al., unpub. data). A follow-up
for this study would be to collect blood from herds at the University
of California, Davis, and establish the status of Bartonella bacteremia.
Future research should include collecting flies in different locations
and herds in which high levels of bacteremia were previously detected.
Inhibitory factors were unlikely to be associated with such a low prevalence
because spiked controls were systematically detected.
Identification of B. henselae DNA in a stable fly indicates the
wide range of blood-sucking arthropods that can harbor this human pathogen.
The partial gltA sequence was identical to that for B. henselae
type Marseille, the most common type found in cats and humans in California
(11). Fleas have been shown to be an efficient vector
of B. henselae (12–14). More recently, B.
henselae DNA was identified in adult questing I. pacificus
ticks from California and from I. ricinus ticks collected on humans
in Italy (8,15). The role of ticks
as potential vectors of B. henselae in humans has also been suggested
(16–18). Since Bartonella are likely to be present
in biting flies, investigating the potential of biting flies as either
mechanical or biologic vectors of Bartonella in cattle and possibly
humans should be pursued.
Acknowledgments
We thank Robin Houston
for helping identify flies.
Ms. Chung's summer
fellowship was funded by the Center for Comparative Medicine, University
of California, Davis, through a training grant from the National Institutes
of Health.
Ms. Chung is a second-year
student at the School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California,
Davis. This study was performed as her NIH summer fellowship through
the Center for Comparative Medicine at University of California, Davis.
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