Volume 29, Number 10—October 2023
Research Letter
Borrelia bavariensis in Questing Ixodes ricinus Ticks, United Kingdom
Abstract
We detected Borrelia bavariensis in Ixodes ricinus ticks collected near 2 towns in the United Kingdom. Human B. bavariensis infections have not been reported previously in the country, underscoring the value of tick surveillance to warn of emerging human disease. B. bavariensis should be considered in patients with suspected neuroborreliosis.
Borrelia bavariensis is one of several genospecies within the B. burgdorferi sensu lato complex to be associated with Lyme disease (1). B. bavariensis is widely distributed across Europe and Asia (1), although surveys of questing ticks in Europe indicate that B. bavariensis occurs at markedly lower prevalences than do other members of the B. burgdorferi s.l. complex (2). Of note, B. bavariensis appears to be overrepresented among B. burgdorferi s.l. clinical isolates in Europe (3), which has led to suggestions that it is more virulent than other members of the complex. Its potential enhanced pathogenicity, coupled with its specific association with neuroborreliosis (3), a profound manifestation of Lyme disease, has made B. bavariensis of particular medical concern.
During May–August 2022, we conducted questing tick surveys at 130 sites in and around 13 towns in the United Kingdom (Figure). We surveyed 10 sites around each town by conducting 15 blanket drag transects, 10 m × 1 m, per site. We identified all ticks collected morphologically as Ixodes ricinus, extracted DNA from each nymph and then incorporated each DNA extract separately as template in a real-time PCR to detect the presence of B. burgdorferi s.l. DNA (4). We processed 1 blank sample with every 5 nymphs to test for cross-contamination between samples; none of these blanks yielded a PCR product. In total, we found 91/1,311 nymphs (6.7%) to be infected with B. burgdorferi s.l. (Table). The positive samples were characterized by incorporating the DNA extracts into a conventional PCR that targeted the 5S/23S rDNA intergenic spacer region (5); the nucleotide base sequences were obtained by Sanger sequencing of both DNA strands. We used Geneious Prime software (https://www.geneious.com) to quality-check, collate, and analyze the sequence data. Of the 91 infected ticks, we successfully identified genospecies for 72. We encountered 5 genospecies: B. afzelii, B. garinii, B. valaisiana, B. burgdorferi sensu stricto, and B. bavariensis (Table). Given the high 5S/23S rDNA intergenic spacer region sequence similarity between strains of B. garinii and B. bavariensis, we incorporated the 4 DNA extracts suspected to be derived from B. bavariensis into a seminested PCR targeting an ospA fragment (6) and sequenced products of this reaction as described above. All 4 yielded unambiguous sequence data that were indistinguishable from one another. This sequence was identical to a 734bp ospA fragment of PBi, the type strain of B. bavariensis and <95% similar to ospA of representatives of other Borrelia genospecies (Genbank accession no. for the ospA sequence we obtained is OR208793).
Our findings confirm the presence of B. bavariensis in questing I. ricinus nymphs in the United Kingdom. B. bavariensis–infected ticks were encountered at 2/130 sites surveyed, 1 near Kings Lynn and 1 near Carlisle, ≈325 km apart, which suggested a broad distribution. Encountering B. bavariensis is not entirely unexpected, given the pathogen’s wide distribution in temperate regions of the northern hemisphere and its adaptation to woodland rodents and hedgehogs (7), all of which are common across the United Kingdom. That earlier surveys in the United Kingdom have not encountered the species may reflect its relatively low prevalence in ticks and the patchiness of its distribution reported in continental Europe (2). In addition, methods used for delineating Borrelia genospecies may have lacked sensitivity. A previous study highlighted problems differentiating between B. bavariensis and B. garinii based on comparative analysis of 5S‐23S rRNA intergenic spacer region sequences; that approach is perhaps the most widely adopted across Europe and beyond (8).
Given the low number of B. bavariensis ticks encountered in the United Kingdom so far, drawing robust conclusions about the ecology of the genospecies is premature. Of interest, at the Carlisle site where we encountered B. bavariensis, 6/82 ticks tested from that site were infected with B. burgdorferi s.l. and 3 (50%) of those infected ticks carried B. bavariensis. B. bavariensis was not encountered in 113 ticks tested from the 3 other sites around Carlisle at which ticks were found. Those observations suggest that, even on a local scale, the occurrence of B. bavariensis is patchy, but enzootic hot spots may exist.
B. bavariensis is an addition to the list of zoonotic pathogens including Anaplasma phagocytophilum, B. miyamotoi, Rickettsia helvetica, and Spiroplasma ixodetis that are known to exist in UK ticks (9) but have yet to be reported in confirmed autochthonous cases in patients in the country. The recent confirmation of locally acquired encephalitis caused by tick-borne encephalitis virus (10) exemplifies the value of tick surveillance as an early warning of emerging human infections. Medical practitioners managing patients with suspected neuroborreliosis in the United Kingdom should now consider B. bavariensis as a potential infecting pathogen.
Ms. Plahe is a microbiology researcher at the University of Salford. Her primary research interest is in pathogen ecology, mainly those that are tick-transmitted or inhabit soil.
Acknowledgments
We thank Isobel Jones, Hannah Ravenswater, Nick Broer, Yue Sun, and Abigail Coole for help with fieldwork. We thank landowners and land managers across the United Kingdom for granting us access to sites used in our survey. We thank Gabriele Margos for advice on ospA PCR.
This work is an output from the project Maximising ecosystem services in urban environments (MEaSURE), funded by The Natural Environment Research Council UK (reference NE/W003120/1).
Authors’ contributions: G.P.: data collection, data analysis, data interpretation, writing; J.H.: data collection, data analysis, data interpretation, writing; D.J.: conceptualization, funding acquisition, study design; L.G.: funding acquisition, literature search, study design, data collection, writing; R.B.: funding acquisition, literature search, study design, data collection, data analysis, data interpretation, writing.
References
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Cite This ArticleOriginal Publication Date: September 18, 2023
Table of Contents – Volume 29, Number 10—October 2023
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Richard Birtles, G47 Peel Building, School of Science, Engineering and Environment, University of Salford, The Crescent, Manchester, M5 4WT, UK
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