Variation in the Microbiota of Ixodes Ticks with Regard to Geography, Species, and Sex

Will Van Treuren(Stanford University), Loganathan Ponnusamy(North Carolina State University), R. Jory Brinkerhoff(University of Richmond), Antonio González(University of California San Diego), Christian M. Parobek(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Jonathan J. Juliano(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Theodore G. Andreadis(Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station), Richard C. Falco(New York State Department of Health), Lorenza Beati Ziegler(Georgia Southern University), Nicholas J. Hathaway(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Corinna Keeler(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Michael Emch(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Jeffrey A. Bailey(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), R. Michael Roe(North Carolina State University), Charles S. Apperson(North Carolina State University), Rob Knight(University of California San Diego), Steven R. Meshnick(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
July 7, 2015
Cited by 248Open Access
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Abstract

Ixodes scapularis is the principal vector of Lyme disease on the East Coast and in the upper Midwest regions of the United States, yet the tick is also present in the Southeast, where Lyme disease is absent or rare. A closely related species, I. affinis, also carries the pathogen in the South but does not seem to transmit it to humans. In order to better understand the geographic diversity of the tick, we analyzed the microbiota of 104 adult I. scapularis and 13 adult I. affinis ticks captured in 19 locations in South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Connecticut, and New York. Initially, ticks from 4 sites were analyzed by 454 pyrosequencing. Subsequently, ticks from these sites plus 15 others were analyzed by sequencing with an Illumina MiSeq machine. By both analyses, the microbiomes of female ticks were significantly less diverse than those of male ticks. The dissimilarity between tick microbiomes increased with distance between sites, and the state in which a tick was collected could be inferred from its microbiota. The genus Rickettsia was prominent in all locations. Borrelia was also present in most locations and was present at especially high levels in one site in western Virginia. In contrast, members of the family Enterobacteriaceae were very common in North Carolina I. scapularis ticks but uncommon in I. scapularis ticks from other sites and in North Carolina I. affinis ticks. These data suggest substantial variations in the Ixodes microbiota in association with geography, species, and sex.


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