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      Serologic Evidence for the Exposure of Eastern Coyotes ( Canis latrans) in Pennsylvania to the Tick-Borne Pathogens Borreliella burgdorferi and Anaplasma phagocytophilum

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          Abstract

          The incidence of Lyme disease ( Borreliella burgdorferi) and anaplasmosis ( Anaplasma phagocytophilum) are increasing in North America and Europe. The causative agents of these debilitating tick-transmitted infections are maintained in nature in an enzootic cycle involving Ixodes ticks and diverse mammals and birds. It has been postulated that predators directly or indirectly influence the dynamics of the enzootic cycle and disease incidence. Here, we demonstrate high seropositivity of eastern coyotes for B. burgdorferi and A. phagocytophilum. As coyotes become established in urban and suburban environments, interactions with humans, companion animals, and urban/suburban wildlife will increase. Knowledge of the pathogens that these highly adaptable predators are exposed to or carry, and their potential to influence or participate in enzootic cycles, is central to efforts to reduce the risk of tick-borne diseases in humans and companion animals.

          ABSTRACT

          Lyme disease and anaplasmosis are tick-borne bacterial diseases caused by Borreliella and Anaplasma species, respectively. A comprehensive analysis of the exposure of eastern coyotes ( Canis latrans) in the northeastern United States to tick-borne pathogens has not been conducted. In this report, we assess the serological status of 128 eastern coyotes harvested in Pennsylvania in 2015 and 2017 for antibodies to Borreliella burgdorferi and Anaplasma phagocytophilum. Immunoblot and dot blot approaches were employed to test each plasma sample by using cell lysates and recombinant proteins as detection antigens. The results demonstrate high seropositivity incidences of 64.8% and 72.7% for B. burgdorferi and A. phagocytophilum, respectively. Antibodies to both pathogens were detected in 51.5% of the plasma samples, indicating high potential for coinfection. Antibodies to the B. burgdorferi proteins DbpB, VlsE, DbpA, BBA36, and OspF (BBO39) were detected in 67.2, 63.3, 56.2, 51.6, and 48.4% of the plasma samples, respectively. Antibodies to the A. phagocytophilum P44 and P130 proteins were detected in 72.7 and 60.9% of the plasma samples, respectively.

          IMPORTANCE The incidence of Lyme disease ( Borreliella burgdorferi) and anaplasmosis ( Anaplasma phagocytophilum) are increasing in North America and Europe. The causative agents of these debilitating tick-transmitted infections are maintained in nature in an enzootic cycle involving Ixodes ticks and diverse mammals and birds. It has been postulated that predators directly or indirectly influence the dynamics of the enzootic cycle and disease incidence. Here, we demonstrate high seropositivity of eastern coyotes for B. burgdorferi and A. phagocytophilum. As coyotes become established in urban and suburban environments, interactions with humans, companion animals, and urban/suburban wildlife will increase. Knowledge of the pathogens that these highly adaptable predators are exposed to or carry, and their potential to influence or participate in enzootic cycles, is central to efforts to reduce the risk of tick-borne diseases in humans and companion animals.

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          Most cited references21

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          Deer, predators, and the emergence of Lyme disease.

          Lyme disease is the most prevalent vector-borne disease in North America, and both the annual incidence and geographic range are increasing. The emergence of Lyme disease has been attributed to a century-long recovery of deer, an important reproductive host for adult ticks. However, a growing body of evidence suggests that Lyme disease risk may now be more dynamically linked to fluctuations in the abundance of small-mammal hosts that are thought to infect the majority of ticks. The continuing and rapid increase in Lyme disease over the past two decades, long after the recolonization of deer, suggests that other factors, including changes in the ecology of small-mammal hosts may be responsible for the continuing emergence of Lyme disease. We present a theoretical model that illustrates how reductions in small-mammal predators can sharply increase Lyme disease risk. We then show that increases in Lyme disease in the northeastern and midwestern United States over the past three decades are frequently uncorrelated with deer abundance and instead coincide with a range-wide decline of a key small-mammal predator, the red fox, likely due to expansion of coyote populations. Further, across four states we find poor spatial correlation between deer abundance and Lyme disease incidence, but coyote abundance and fox rarity effectively predict the spatial distribution of Lyme disease in New York. These results suggest that changes in predator communities may have cascading impacts that facilitate the emergence of zoonotic diseases, the vast majority of which rely on hosts that occupy low trophic levels.
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            An estimate of Lyme borreliosis incidence in Western Europe

            Lyme borreliosis (LB) is the most common zoonotic disease transmitted by ticks in the USA and Europe. This review aims to estimate the regional burden of LB in Western Europe. Data from previous publications will be used to calculate the mean incidence. The mean incidence rates will then be combined to estimate the regional burden and a population-weighted regional burden of disease based on the standardized incidence rate from the included studies and the total population at risk.
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              Mapping the expansion of coyotes ( Canis latrans ) across North and Central America

              Abstract The geographic distribution of coyotes ( Canis latrans ) has dramatically expanded since 1900, spreading across much of North America in a period when most other mammal species have been declining. Although this considerable expansion has been well documented at the state/provincial scale, continent-wide descriptions of coyote spread have portrayed conflicting distributions for coyotes prior to the 1900s, with popularly referenced anecdotal accounts showing them restricted to the great plains, and more obscure, but data-rich accounts suggesting they ranged across the arid west. To provide a scientifically credible map of the coyote’s historical range (10,000–300 BP) and describe their range expansion from 1900 to 2016, we synthesized archaeological and fossil records, museum specimens, peer-reviewed reports, and records from wildlife management agencies. Museum specimens confirm that coyotes have been present in the arid west and California throughout the Holocene, well before European colonization. Their range in the late 1800s was undistinguishable from earlier periods, and matched the distribution of non-forest habitat in the region. Coyote expansion began around 1900 as they moved north into taiga forests, east into deciduous forests, west into costal temperate rain forests, and south into tropical rainforests. Forest fragmentation and the extirpation of larger predators probably enabled these expansions. In addition, hybridization with wolves ( C. lupus , C. lycaon , and/or C. rufus ) and/or domestic dogs has been documented in the east, and suspected in the south. Our detailed account of the original range of coyotes and their subsequent expansion provides the core description of a large scale ecological experiment that can help us better understand the predator-prey interactions, as well as evolution through hybridization.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                mSphere
                mSphere
                msph
                msph
                mSphere
                mSphere
                American Society for Microbiology (1752 N St., N.W., Washington, DC )
                2379-5042
                12 August 2020
                Jul-Aug 2020
                : 5
                : 4
                : e00544-20
                Affiliations
                [a ]Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, Virginia, USA
                [b ]Department of Animal Biotechnology and Conservation, Delaware Valley University, Doylestown, Pennsylvania, USA
                [c ]USDA-APHIS-Wildlife Services, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, USA
                University of Kentucky
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to Richard T. Marconi, Richard.marconi@ 123456vcuhhealth.org .

                Citation Izac JR, Camire AC, Schuler EJA, Hatke AL, O’Bier NS, Oliver LD, Jr, Corondi A, Plocinski OC, Desmond RP, Naimi WA, Carlyon JA, Van Why KR, Shelly J, Marconi RT. 2020. Serologic evidence for the exposure of Eastern coyotes ( Canis latrans) in Pennsylvania to the tick-borne pathogens Borreliella burgdorferi and Anaplasma phagocytophilum. mSphere 5:e00544-20. https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00544-20.

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2778-5066
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6035-7306
                Article
                mSphere00544-20
                10.1128/mSphere.00544-20
                7426170
                32817454
                78af5ebd-dd0f-4dd3-9457-369be33a7651
                Copyright © 2020 Izac et al.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.

                History
                : 12 July 2020
                : 18 July 2020
                Page count
                supplementary-material: 1, Figures: 2, Tables: 3, Equations: 0, References: 26, Pages: 9, Words: 5543
                Categories
                Observation
                Host-Microbe Biology
                Custom metadata
                July/August 2020

                anaplasma,borrelia,borreliella,coyote,ixodes,lyme disease,canis latrans,dbpa,eastern coyotes,p44,vlse,canines

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