Borrelia garinii in seabird ticks (Ixodes uriae), Atlantic Coast, North America.Borrelia Borrelia A genus of spirochetes that have a unique genome composed of a linear chromosome and numerous linear and circular plasmids. Borreliae are motile, helical organisms with 4–30 uneven, irregular coils, and are 5–25 micrometers long and 0. garinii is the most neurotropic neurotropic pertaining to or emanating from neurotrophy, e.g. neurotropic osteopathy. of the genospecies of B. burgdorferi sensu lato that cause Lyme disease Lyme disease, a nonfatal bacterial infection that causes symptoms ranging from fever and headache to a painful swelling of the joints. The first American case of Lyme's characteristic rash was documented in 1970 and the disease was first identified in a cluster at in Europe, where it is transmitted to avian and mammalian reservoir hosts and to humans by Ixodes ricinus. B. garinii is also maintained in an enzootic en·zo·ot·ic adj. Prevalent among or restricted to animals of a specific geographic area. Used of a disease. n. An enzootic disease. enzootic peculiar to or present constantly in a location. See also endemic. cycle in seabirds by I. uriae, a tick found at high latitudes in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. To determine whether B. garinii is present in seabird ticks on the Atlantic Coast of North America, we examined 261 I. uriae ticks by polyclonal polyclonal /poly·clo·nal/ (-klon´'l) 1. derived from different cells. 2. pertaining to several clones. polyclonal derived from different cells; pertaining to several clones. antiborrelial fluorescent antibody. Ten of 61 ticks from Gull Island, Newfoundland, were positive for borreliae by this screen. Amplicons of DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. obtained by PCR PCR polymerase chain reaction. PCR abbr. polymerase chain reaction Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) that targeted the B. garinii rrs-rrla intergenic spacer were sequenced and matched to GenBank sequences for B. garinii. The potential for introduction of this agent into the North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. Lyme disease enzootic is unknown. ********** In Europe, Lyme disease is caused by 3 genospecies of Borrelia burgdorferi Borrelia burg·dor·fe·ri n. A spirochete causing Lyme disease in humans. Borrelia burgdorferi The spirochete agent of Lyme disease, which contains several outer membrane proteins and a highly immunogenic flagellar (i.e., B. afzelii, B. garinii, B. burgdorferi sensu stricto), while in North America only B. burgdorferi sensu stricto, the genospecies present in I. scapularis ticks, has been implicated im·pli·cate tr.v. im·pli·cat·ed, im·pli·cat·ing, im·pli·cates 1. To involve or connect intimately or incriminatingly: evidence that implicates others in the plot. 2. in human disease. B. garinii, the most neurotropic of these 3 genospecies, causes most neurologic Lyme disease in Europe, including cases of meningopolyneuritis and, rarely, encephalomyelitis encephalomyelitis /en·ceph·a·lo·my·eli·tis/ (en-sef?ah-lo-mi?e-li´tis) inflammation of the brain and spinal cord. acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (1-3). The presence of multiple pathogenic genospecies that cause Lyme disease in Europe complicates serodiagnostic testing (4). In Eurasia, B. garinii is transmitted to avian and rodent hosts and to humans by I. ricinus, the sheep or forest tick, and I. persulcatus, the taiga taiga (tī`gə), northern coniferous-forest belt of Eurasia, bordered on the north by the treeless tundra and on the south by the steppe. tick (5-9). I. uriae, the seabird tick, also maintains this agent in a "silent" enzootic cycle in seabirds at their nesting sites over a wide but discontinuous area (10-13). Although these 2 enzootic cycles are generally geographically and ecologically separate, interchange of B. garinii strains may occur at sites where both vectors coexist (14). The risk for seabird-associated strain types of B. garinii to cause Lyme disease, however, is not known (15). Although B. garinii is present in seabird ticks in a nearly circumpolar cir·cum·po·lar adj. 1. Located or found in one of the Polar Regions. 2. Astronomy Denoting a star that from a given observer's latitude does not go below the horizon. distribution in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres (12,13), including Alaska, the presence of B. garinii in I. uriae ticks at sites on the North Atlantic Coast has not previously been documented. We sought to determine whether B. garinii is present in ticks obtained from colonial seabird nesting sites on the Atlantic Coast of North America. Methods Seabird researchers working at several sites on the Atlantic Coast in the United States and Canada (Figure 1) submitted I. uriae ticks to our laboratory for analysis (16). Ticks were identified to species, stage, and degree of engorgement engorgement /en·gorge·ment/ (en-gorj´ment) 1. local congestion; distention with fluids. 2. hyperemia. engorgement distention. (17). A subset of ticks was dissected, and midguts were screened for spirochetes by fluorescent microscopy fluorescent microscopy (fl [FIGURE 1 OMITTED] DNA was extracted from Borrelia-positive ticks by using the Qiagen DNeasy Tissue Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA, USA). DNA amplification was performed in a designated room with genus-specific primers that include the partial sequence of rrs-rrla intergenic spacer region as described by Bunikis et al. (19) with use of negative controls. Amplification products were viewed on a 1% agarose agarose more highly purified form of agar with similar uses to agar and widely used in the separation of nucleic acid fragments. gel containing 0.5 [micro]g/mL ethidium bromide. At a second laboratory, ticks positive by fluorescent antibody screen were prepared as above for DNA extraction, and PCR was performed by using primers directed at the 16S ribosomal DNA. Sequences of amplicons obtained at both laboratories were confirmed to be B. garinii by comparison with known sequences in the GenBank database. Results I. uriae ticks submitted from 6 seabird colony sites and several hosts in the United States and Canada were processed (Table). Through 2005, 880 I. uriae ticks recovered primarily from Atlantic puffin Atlantic puffin Fratercula arctica. chicks or their nests, were submitted from Maine sites, and another 383 were submitted from sites on the Atlantic Coast of Canada. Over 200 ticks from Maine sites and 61 ticks from Canadian sites off the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador Newfoundland and Labrador, province, Canada Newfoundland and Labrador (ny `fənlənd, ny were screened for borreliae by fluorescent
microscopy.Spirochetes were detected only in ticks from Gull Island, Newfoundland (47[degrees] 15'N, 52[degrees] 46'W), where 9 of 22 adults and 1 of 39 nymphal nymph n. 1. Greek & Roman Mythology Any of numerous minor deities represented as beautiful maidens inhabiting and sometimes personifying features of nature such as trees, waters, and mountains. 2. ticks were positive. DNA was extracted from 2 of these ticks, and PCR showed a 1,900-base amplicon of the rrs-rrls intergenic spacer region that matched with B. garinii on comparison with GenBank sequences. Two additional ticks were examined in the laboratory of Sam Telford (Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine, Grafton, MA, USA) by means of PCR targeting of 16S ribosomal DNA and again confirmed a match for B. garinii (GenBank bankit ban·kit n. Southern Louisiana & East Texas Variant of banquette. no. 800902 DG463373). Figure 2 shows the sequence from one of the ticks shown in an alignment with sequences from B. burgdorferi strain B31 and a representative B. garinii sample from GenBank. [FIGURE 2 OMITTED] Discussion The finding of B. garinii in I. uriae ticks from Gull Island, Newfoundland, adds to the known distribution of this agent and increases the likelihood that this agent is present in other colonial seabird nesting sites on the Atlantic Coast of North America, as is the case in Europe. The recent emergence of I. scapularis in coastal Maine and some Maritime Canadian sites (20,21) brings these 2 enzootic cycles of different genospecies of B. burgdorferi into proximate proximate /prox·i·mate/ (prok´si-mit) immediate or nearest. prox·i·mate adj. Closely related in space, time, or order; very near; proximal. proximate immediate; nearest. areas, although their ecologic settings differ. The public health importance of this finding depends on the probability of the introduction of B. garinii into emergent I. scapularis-vectored B. burgdorferi s.s. cycles and its potential maintenance in this cycle. The public health effects also depend on the pathogenic potential for human disease caused by seabird-associated strains of B. garinii (15). The remote geographic and, at some sites, isolated topographic location of colonial seabird colonies provide significant barriers to the introduction of B. garinii into other vector ticks and their reservoir hosts. I. scapularis is dispersed to remote coastal islands of the North American Atlantic Coast during bird migration (22,23), but its establishment at these sites requires the presence of deer (24-26). With rare exception, deer are absent from sites with large seabird colonies, which are usually limited to offshore islands. Dispersal of infected I. uriae to proximate coastal areas by seabird hosts is unlikely because most species of seabirds parasitized by I. uriae are highly philopatric and forage at sea. One exception might be gulls, which may move between coastal and island sites. Passerine passerine Any perching bird. All passerines belong to the largest order of birds, Passeriformes, and have feet specialized for holding onto a horizontal branch (perching). The passerine foot has three forward-directed toes and one backward-directed toe. birds, which may forage near seabird colonies, provide another potential mechanism for dispersal of B. garinii, either through movement of infected I. uriae ticks or by serving as reservoir hosts of this agent. However, the frequency of parasitism parasitism: see parasite. parasitism Relationship between two species in which one benefits at the expense of the other. Ectoparasites live on the body surface of the host; endoparasites live in their hosts' organs, tissues, or cells and often rely of passerine birds by I. uriae ticks is unknown. If B. garinii was introduced into I. scapularis ticks, its maintenance in this cycle would depend on the vector competence of I. scapularis for B. garinii, the reservoir competence of available hosts, and perhaps the population genetics and strain diversity of B. garinii (14,27). Although I. scapularis is vector-competent for transmission of B. garinii to rodents, its efficiency of transmission appears lower than for B. burgdorferi s.s. (28). In addition, the vector competence of I. scapularis for seabird-associated strains of B. garinii has not been tested. The presence of similar ribotypes of B. garinii in I. ricinus ticks on a European island suggests that interchange of different B. garinii strains in different ecologic cycles may occur (14). To determine the public health importance of B. garinii in seabird colonies along the North Atlantic coast, additional studies on the issues of dispersal, vector competence, and reservoir host competence are needed. All strain types of B. garinii may not be pathogenic for humans, and future studies should also address the potential for seabird-associated strains to cause disease. Acknowledgments We thank Anthony Diamond of the University of New Brunswick The University of New Brunswick (UNB) is a Canadian university located in the province of New Brunswick. The university has two main campuses: the principal campus founded in 1785 in Fredericton and a smaller campus which was opened in Saint John in 1964. , Linda Welch of the Maine Coastal Islands National Wildlife Refuge National Wildlife Refuge , and Stephen
Kress of the National Audubon Society The National Audubon Society is an American non-profit environmental organization dedicated to conservancy. Incorporated in 1905, it is one of the oldest of such organizations in the world. , and their staffs, for the
collection of I. uriae from Machias Seal Island Dr Smith is an infectious disease physician and codirector of the Vector-borne Disease Laboratory at the Maine Medical Center Maine Medical Center (MMC), located in Portland, Maine in the United States, is the largest hospital in northern New England. It is a 606-bed facility which also serves as a teaching hospital. Research Institute. His research interests include the ecology of Lyme disease emergence and the strain diversity of B. burgdorferi. References (1.) Steere AC, Coburn J, Glickstein L. The emergence of Lyme disease. J Clin Invest. 2004;113:1093-101. (2.) Oschmann P, Dorndoff W, Hornig C, Schafer C, Wellensiek HJ, Pflughaupt KW. Stages and syndromes of neuroborreliosis. J Neurol. 1998;245:262-72. (3.) Halpern JJ. Nervous system Lyme disease. Vector Borne Zoonotic Zoonotic A disease which can be spread from animals to humans. Mentioned in: Zoonosis Dis. 2002;2:241-7. (4.) Hauser U, Lehnert G, Lobentamzer R, Wilske B. Interpretation criteria for standardized Western blots for three European species of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato. J Clin Microbiol. 1997;35:1433-44. (5.) Gern L, Humair P-F P-F Power-Fusion (Flash website) . Ecology of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato in Europe. In: Gray JS, Kahl O, Lane RS, Stanek G, editors. Lyme borreliosis: biology, epidemiology, and control. New York: CABI CABI Commonwealth Agricultural Bureaux International (UK) CABI Centre for Agriculture and Biosciences International (UK) CABI Colorado Association of Business Intermediaries CABI California Birth Index Publishing; 2002. p. 149-74. (6.) Nakao M, Miyamoto K, Fukunaga M. Lyme disease spirochetes in Japan: enzootic transmission cycles in birds, rodents, and Ixodes persulcatus ticks. J Infect Dis. 1994;170:878-82. (7.) Kurtenbach K, Peacey M, Rijpkema SGT, Hoodless AN, Nuttall PA, Randolph SE. Differential transmission of the genospecies of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato by game birds and small rodents in England. Appl Environ Microbiol. 1998;64:1169-73. (8.) Humair P-F, Postic D, Wallich R, Gem L. An avian reservoir (Turdus merula) of the Lyme borreliosis spirochetes. Zentrabl. Bakteriol. 1998;287:521-38. (9.) Richter D, Endepols S, Ohlenbusch A, Eiffert H, Spielman A, Matuschka FR. Genospecies diversity of Lyme disease spirochetes in rodent reservoirs. Emerg Infect Dis. 1999;5:291-6. (10.) Olsen B, Jaenson TGT TGT Target TGT Ticket Granting Ticket (Windows 2000 Kerberos security) TGT Target Corp (stock symbol) TGT Turbine Gas Temperature TGT TDRSS Ground Terminal TGT Tank Gunnery Trainer TGT Target Tracker , Noppa L, Bunikis J, Bergstrom S. A Lyme borreliosis cycle in seabirds and Ixodes uriae ticks. Nature. 1993;362:340-2. (11.) Olsen B, Duffy DC, Jaenson TGT, Gylfe A. J. Bonnedahl J, Bergstrom S. Transhemispheric exchange of Lyme disease spirochetes by seabirds. J Clin Microbiol. 1995;33:3270-4. (12.) Gylfe A, Olsen B, Strasevicius D, Ras NM, Weihe P, Noppa L, et al. Isolation of Lyme disease borrelia from puffins (Fratercula arctica) and seabird ticks (Ixodes uriae) on the Faeroe Islands. J Clin Microbiol. 1999;37:890-6. (13.) Gylfe A, Yabuki M, Drotz M, Bergstrom S, Fukunaga M, Olsen B. Phylogenetie relationships of Ixodes uriae (Acari: Ixodidae) and their significance to transequatorial dispersal of Borrelia garinii. Hereditas. 2001;134:195-9. (14.) Bunikis J, Olsen B, Fingerle V, Bonnedahl J, Wilske B, Bergstrom S. Molecular polymorphism of the Lyme disease agent Borrelia garinii in Northern Europe is influenced by a novel enzootic Borrelia focus in the North Atlantic. J Clin Microbiol. 1996;34:364-8. (15.) Baranton G, Seinost G, Theodore G, Postic D, Dykhuizen D. Distinct levels of genetic diversity of Borrelia burgdorferi are associated with different aspects of pathogenicity. Res Microbiol. 2001;152:149-56. (16.) Keirans JE, Lacombe EH. First records of Amblyomma americanum, Ixodes (Ixodes) dentatus, and Ixodes (Ceratixodes) uriae (Acari: Ixodidae) from Maine. J Parasitol. 1998;84:629-31. (17.) Cooley RA, Kohls GM. The genus Ixodes in North America. Nat. Inst Health Bull (Edinb). 1945;184:223-8. (18.) Donahue JG, Piesman J, Spielman A. Reservoir competence of white-footed mice for Lyme disease spirochetes. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1987;36:92-6. (19.) Bunikis J, Garpmo U, Tsao J, Berglund J, Fish D, Barbour AG. Sequence typing reveals extensive strain diversity of the Lyme borreliosis agents Borrelia burgdorferi in North America and Borrelia afzelii in Europe. Microbiology. 2004;150:1741-55. (20.) Bell CR, Specht HB, Coombs Coombs can refer to:
(21.) Scott JD, Fernando K, Banerjee SN, Durden LA, Byrne SK, Banerjee M, et al. Birds disperse ixodid (Acari: Ixodidae) and Borrelia burgdorferi-infected ticks in Canada. J Med Entomol. 2001;38:493-500. (22.) Smith RP Jr, Rand PW, Lacombe EH, Morris SR, Holmes DW, Caporale DA. Role of bird migration in the long-distance dispersal of Ixodes dammini, the vector of Lyme disease. J Infect Dis. 1996;174:221-4. (23.) Morshed MG, Scott JD, Banerjee SN, Banerjee M, Fitzgerald T, Fernando K, et al. First isolation of Lyme disease spirochete spirochete Any of an order (Spirochaetales) of spiral-shaped bacteria. Some are serious pathogens for humans, causing such diseases as syphilis, yaws, and relapsing fever. Spirochetes are gram-negative (see gram stain) and motile. , Borrelia burgdorferi, from black-legged tick, Ixodes scapularis, removed from a bird in Nova Scotia, Canada. Can Com Dis Rep. 1999;25:153-5. (24.) Wilson ML, Telford SR III, Piesman J, Spielman A. Reduced abundance of immature Ixodes dammini (Acari: Ixodidae) following elimination of deer. J Med Entomol. 1988;25:224-8. (25.) Rand PW, Lubelczyk C, Holman MS, Lacombe EH, Smith RP Jr. Abundance of Ixodes scapularis (Acari:Ixodidae) after the complete removal of deer from an isolated offshore island, endemic for Lyme disease. J Med Entomol. 2004;41:779-84. (26.) Rand PW, Lubelczyk C, Lavigne GR, Elias S, Holman MS, Lacombe EH, et al. Deer density and the abundance of Ixodes scapularis (Acari:Ixodidae). J Med Entomol. 2003;40:179-84. (27.) Kurtenbach K, Schaefer SM, Sewall H, Peacey M, Hoodless A, Nuttal PA, et al. Differential survival of Lyme borreliosis in ticks that feed on birds. Infect Immun. 2002;70:5893-5. (28.) Dolan MC, Piesman J, Mbow ML, Maupin GO, Peter O, Brossard M, et al. Vector competence of Ixodes scapularis and Ixodes ricinus (Acari: Ixodidae) for three genospecies of Borrelia burgdorferi. J Med Entomol. 1998;35:465-70. Robert P. Smith, Jr, * Sabir Bin Muzaffar, ([dagger]) Jennifer Lavers, ([dagger]) Eleanor H. Lacombe, * Bruce K. Cahill, * Charles B. Lubelczyk, * Allen Kinsler, * Amy J. Mathers, * and Peter W. Rand * * Maine Medical Center Research Institute, South Portland, Maine South Portland is a city in Cumberland County, Maine, United States. As of the 2000 census, the city population was 23,324. Geography South Portland is located at (43.631549, -70.272724)GR1. , USA; and ([dagger]) Memorial University of Newfoundland Memorial University of Newfoundland, at St. John's, N.L., Canada; provincially supported; coeducational; founded 1925 as Memorial Univ. College. It achieved university status in 1949. , Saint John's, Newfoundland, Canada Address for correspondence: Robert P. Smith, Vector-borne Disease Laboratory, Maine Medical Center Research Institute 75 John Roberts Rd, Suite 9B, South Portland, ME 04106, USA; email: smithr@mmc.org The opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. or the institutions with which the authors are affiliated.
Table. Submissions of Ixodes uriae from coastal Maine (USA)
and Canada, 1996-2005
Host species
Atlantic Murre (Uria Black
puffin aalge)/ guillemot
(Fratercula Razorbill (Cepphus
Site arctica) (Alca torda) grille)
Machias Seal 218
Island *
Matinicus Rock * 258 23 25
Petit Manan Island * 56 12
Seal Island * 46
Gannet Island ([dagger]) 111 88
Gull Island ([double dagger]) 22
Host species
Herring Common
gull eider
(Larus (Somateria
Site argentatus) mollissima)
Machias Seal
Island *
Matinicus Rock *
Petit Manan Island *
Seal Island *
Gannet Island ([dagger]) 8
Gull Island ([double dagger]) 22
Soil/
On Flag/drag litter
Site humans sampling sample
Machias Seal 5 52
Island *
Matinicus Rock * 210
Petit Manan Island *
Seal Island *
Gannet Island ([dagger]) 72 31
Gull Island ([double dagger]) 5 76 200
* Maine, USA.
([dagger]) Labrador, Canada.
([double dagger]) Newfoundland, Canada.
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