Next-generation massive sequencing and the bacterial profile of ticks from wild and domestic animals and blood of humans in the chihuahuan desert
Next-generation massive sequencing and the bacterial profile of ticks from wild and domestic animals and blood of humans in the chihuahuan desert
Date
2022-12
Authors
Barraza Guerrero, Sergio Iván
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Universidad Autónoma Chapingo
Abstract
Ticks are a type of arthropod belonging to the
Ixodoidea suborder, which parasitize domestic
and wild animals for food. During the
pathogenesis process, they transmit many
bacterial diseases in parasitized vertebrates,
some of which are zoonotic, such as Rocky
Mountain spotted fever caused by Rickettsia
rickettsii, different types of Ehrlichiosis,
granulocytic anaplasmosis, Q fever, Lyme
disease, among others. In the context of public
health, both globally and particularly in northern
Mexico, there is well-founded concern due to the
increase in the population of stray dogs, which
increases the number of vectors of these
diseases that affect animal hosts, as well as the
population that resides near these animals.
Likewise, this type of vector also affects various
important wild species in the region under
analysis, functioning as reservoirs of tick-borne
pathogens (TBP) that can spread to urban areas,
and can also affect the health of threatened
species as in the case of the Mapimí Bolson
tortoise (Gopherus flavomarginatus). The
purpose of the following study is to analyze by
means of next-generation sequencing (NGS) the
bacterial communities in the blood of people who
were exposed to tick bites and compare it with
people not exposed to this factor, as well as to
analyze the bacterial profile of two species of
ticks of the family Ixodidae and Agarasidae of
importance in public, ecological and veterinary
health in the Comarca Lagunera region and the
Chihuahuan desert.
Description
Tesis (Doctorado en Ciencias en Recursos Naturales y Medio Ambiente en Zonas Áridas)
Keywords
Ticks, zoonoses, Tick-borne
diseases, Tick-borne pathogens, bites