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. 2024 Sep 30;18(9):e0012544.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0012544. eCollection 2024 Sep.

Molecular detection of Rickettsia species in ectoparasites collected from two southern provinces of Cambodia

Affiliations

Molecular detection of Rickettsia species in ectoparasites collected from two southern provinces of Cambodia

Didot Budi Prasetyo et al. PLoS Negl Trop Dis. .

Abstract

Arthropod-borne rickettsioses comprise a wide variety of subtypes that are endemic in Cambodia, but there remains very little data on the geographic distribution of the pathogens or their vectors. Surveys were conducted in Koh Kong and Preah Sihanouk Provinces between September 2017 and June 2018 to collect ectoparasites from peridomestic animals and the environment using dragging and flagging methods. Collected ectoparasites were sorted and identified morphologically, then pooled by species, host, and location for molecular detection using Rickettsia genus- and species-specific qPCR and/or multilocus sequence typing (MLST) assays. A total of 14,254 ectoparasites were collected including seven new locality records. Rickettsia species were detected in 35.5% (174/505) of the pools screened representing 3,149 randomly selected ectoparasites from the total collected. Rickettsia asembonensis was detected in 89.6% (147/164) of Rickettsia-positive flea pools and 3.6% (6/164) of the flea pools were positive for both R. asembonensis and Rickettsia felis. Candidatus Rickettsia senegalensis from Ctenocephalides orientis fleas and Rickettsia sp. close to Rickettsia japonica and Rickettsia heilongjiangensis from Haemaphysalis ticks were identified by MLST. This appears to be the first report of these new ectoparasite records and rickettsial species in southern Cambodia, suggesting a potential health risk to military and civilians in this region.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Collection sites in Koh Kong and Preah Sihanouk provinces.
Maps were generated using the free, open-source QGIS software. Subnational administrative boundary shapefiles for Cambodia and neighboring countries are available for download from The Humanitarian Data Exchange (https://data.humdata.org/dataset/).
Fig 2
Fig 2. Algorithm for detection and identification of ectoparasite-borne rickettsioses by qPCR assays.

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