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White-Toothed Shrews (Genus Crocidura ): Potential Reservoirs for Zoonotic Leptospira spp. and Arthropod-Borne Pathogens?

Viola C HaringJens JacobBernd WaltherMartin TrostMichael StubbeKatja Mertens-ScholzFalk MelzerNelly ScudaMichaela GentilWolfdieter SixlTanja SchäferMichal StankoRonny WolfMartin PfefferRainer Günter UlrichAnna Obiegala
Published in: Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Three species of white-toothed shrews of the order Eulipotyphla are present in central Europe: the bicolored ( Crocidura leucodon ), greater ( Crocidura russula ) and lesser ( Crocidura suaveolens ) white-toothed shrews. Their precise distribution in Germany is ill-defined and little is known about them as reservoirs for zoonotic pathogens ( Leptospira spp., Coxiella burnetii , Brucella spp., Anaplasma phagocytophilum , Babesia spp., Neoehrlichia mikurensis and Bartonella spp.). We investigated 372 Crocidura spp. from Germany (n = 341), Austria (n = 18), Luxembourg (n = 2) and Slovakia (n = 11). West European hedgehogs ( Erinaceus europaeus ) were added to compare the presence of pathogens in co-occurring insectivores. Crocidura russula were distributed mainly in western and C. suaveolens mainly in north-eastern Germany. Crocidura leucodon occurred in overlapping ranges with the other shrews. Leptospira spp. DNA was detected in 28/227 C. russula and 2/78 C. leucodon samples. Further characterization revealed that Leptospira kirschneri had a sequence type (ST) 100. Neoehrlichia mikurensis DNA was detected in spleen tissue from 2/213 C. russula samples. Hedgehogs carried DNA from L. kirschneri (ST 100), L. interrogans (ST 24), A. phagocytophilum and two Bartonella species. This study improves the knowledge of the current distribution of Crocidura shrews and identifies C. russula as carrier of Leptospira kirschneri . However, shrews seem to play little-to-no role in the circulation of the arthropod-borne pathogens investigated.
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