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  • Molecular epidemiology of B...
    Rizwan, Muhammad; Ali, Shahzad; Javid, Arshad; von Fricken, Michael E.; Rashid, Muhammad Imran

    Acta tropica, July 2023, 2023-Jul, 2023-07-00, 20230701, Volume: 243
    Journal Article

    •18 out of 236 of rodents were positive for both gltA and rpoB fragments.•Rattus rattus and R. norvegicus had 7.94% (12/151) and 7.05% (6/85) positivity rates for Bartonella DNA.•The rpoB gene sequence Bartonella genotype a close relatedness between Bartonella spp.from Sahiwal and B. elizabethae. Bartonella can infect a variety of mammals including humans and has been detected in the Americas, Europe, Africa, and Asia. Roughly two-thirds of identified Bartonella species are found and maintained in rodent reservoirs, with some of these species linked to human infections. Rodents (N=236) were caught from the Sahiwal division of Punjab, Pakistan and tested for Bartonella using PCR targeting gltA and rpoB genes, followed by sequencing of rpoB-positive samples. Genetic relatedness to other published Bartonella spp. rpoB gene sequences were examined using BLAST and phylogenetic analysis. Overall, 7.62% (18/236) of rodents were positive for both gltA and rpoB fragments. Rattus rattus and R. norvegicus had 7.94% (12/151) and 7.05% (6/85) positivity rates for Bartonella DNA, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis revealed a close relatedness between Bartonella spp. from Pakistan to Bartonella spp. from China, Nepal, and Malaysia. This study is the first reported detection of Bartonella spp. in R. rattus and R. norvegicus from the Sahiwal area of Punjab, Pakistan.