The
Anaplasmataceae family (order
Rickettsiales) encompasses obligately intracellular bacteria of the genera
Anaplasma,
Ehrlichia, and
Neorickettsia. Together with
Coxiella burnetii (
Coxiellaceae family, order
Legionellales), these bacteria represent important causative agents of diseases in humans and animals. The scarcity of studies that investigated the occurrence of these agents in bats and their associated ectoparasites, emphasizes the need to achieve a better understanding of the role of these animals in the maintenance of such bacteria. Herein, 418 samples (133 blood, 135 spleen, and 150 ectoparasites) are collected from 135 non-hematophagous bats belonging to 12 species in a periurban area of Campo Grande city, Mato Grosso do Sul state, midwestern Brazil. In the results, 1.65% (7/418), 12.04% (50/418), and 13.63% (57/418) of samples are positive in PCR assays for
Anaplasma spp. (16S rRNA gene),
Ehrlichia spp. (
dsb gene), and
Neorickettsia spp. (16S rRNA gene), respectively.
Anaplasma spp. and
Neorickettsia spp. are detected in one (5.26%)
Ornithodoros hasei tick larva.
Ehrlichia spp. is detected in 14% of bat flies (represented by
Megistopoda aranea,
Trichobius costalimai, and
Strebla hertigi), 6% of tick larvae (
O. hasei), 12% of Spinturnicidae mites (represented by
Periglischrus sp.,
P. torrealbai, and
P. acutisternus), and 38% of Macronyssidae mites (
Steatonyssuss sp.). The obtained sequences are observed to be similar to
Anaplasma phagocytophilum (97.42–97.6% identified),
Ehrlichia minasensis (96.73–100% identified),
Neorickettsia risticii (96.7–100% identified), and
Neorickettsia findlayensis (95.07–100% identified) by BLASTn analyses, and closely related to
Ehrlichia ruminantium by phylogenetic analyses based on the
gltA gene. No bat samples (blood/spleen) are positive in the qPCR assay for
C. burnetii based on the
IS1111 gene. The present work shows, for the first time, the occurrence of
Anaplasmataceae in bats and associated ectoparasites (ticks, mites, and bat flies) from Brazil.
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