DOI
Microbiome and mitogenomics of the chigger mite Pentidionis agamae: potential role as an Orientia vector and associations with divergent clades of Wolbachia
and Borrelia
Alkathiry H.A., Alghamdi S.Q., Sinha A., Margos G., Stekolnikov A.A., Alagaili A.N., Darby A.C., Makepeace B.L., Khoo J.J.
BMC Genomics, 25: 380 (2024).
S U M M A R Y
Background
Trombiculid mites are globally distributed, highly diverse arachnids that largely lack molecular resources
such as whole mitogenomes for the elucidation of taxonomic relationships. Trombiculid larvae (chiggers) parasitise
vertebrates and can transmit bacteria (Orientia spp.) responsible for scrub typhus, a zoonotic febrile illness. Orientia
tsutsugamushi causes most cases of scrub typhus and is endemic to the Asia-Pacific Region, where it is transmitted
by Leptotrombidium spp. chiggers. However, in Dubai, Candidatus Orientia chuto was isolated from a case of scrub
typhus and is also known to circulate among rodents in Saudi Arabia and Kenya, although its vectors remain poorly
defined. In addition to Orientia, chiggers are often infected with other potential pathogens or arthropod-specific
endosymbionts, but their significance for trombiculid biology and public health is unclear.
Results
Ten chigger species were collected from rodents in southwestern Saudi Arabia. Chiggers were pooled
according to species and screened for Orientia DNA by PCR. Two species (Microtrombicula muhaylensis and Pentidionis
agamae) produced positive results for the htrA gene, although Ca. Orientia chuto DNA was confirmed by Sanger
sequencing only in P. agamae. Metagenomic sequencing of three pools of P. agamae provided evidence for two
other bacterial associates: a spirochaete and a Wolbachia symbiont. Phylogenetic analysis of 16S rRNA and multilocus
sequence typing genes placed the spirochaete in a clade of micromammal-associated Borrelia spp. that are
widely-distributed globally with no known vector. For the Wolbachia symbiont, a genome assembly was obtained
that allowed phylogenetic localisation in a novel, divergent clade. Cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) barcodes for Saudi
Arabian chiggers enabled comparisons with global chigger diversity, revealing several cases of discordance with classical
taxonomy. Complete mitogenome assemblies were obtained for the three P. agamae pools and almost 50 SNPs
were identified, despite a common geographic origin.
Conclusions
P. agamae was identified as a potential vector of Ca. Orientia chuto on the Arabian Peninsula. The
detection of an unusual Borrelia sp. and a divergent Wolbachia symbiont in P. agamae indicated links with chigger
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