Han, Pei-YuXu, Fen-HuiTian, Jia-WeiZhao, Jun-YingYang, ZeKong, WeiWang, BoGuo, Li-JunZhang, Yun-Zhi2024-05-102024-05-102024-04-28Han, P.-Y.; Xu, F.-H.; Tian, J.-W.; Zhao, J.-Y.; Yang, Z.; Kong, W.; Wang, B.; Guo, L.-J.; Zhang, Y.-Z. Molecular Prevalence, Genetic Diversity, and Tissue Tropism of Bartonella Species in Small Mammals from Yunnan Province, China. Animals 2024, 14, 1320.https://hdl.handle.net/10919/118953<i>Bartonella</i> is an intracellular parasitic zoonotic pathogen that can infect animals and cause a variety of human diseases. This study investigates <i>Bartonella</i> prevalence in small mammals in Yunnan Province, China, focusing on tissue tropism. A total of 333 small mammals were sampled from thirteen species, three orders, four families, and four genera in Heqing and Gongshan Counties. Conventional PCR and real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR) were utilized for detection and quantification, followed by bioinformatic analysis of obtained DNA sequences. Results show a 31.5% detection rate, varying across species. Notably, <i>Apodemus chevrieri, Eothenomys eleusis, Niviventer fulvescens, Rattus tanezumi, Episoriculus leucops, Anourosorex&nbsp;squamipes</i>, and <i>Ochotona Thibetana</i> exhibited infection rates of 44.4%, 27.7%, 100.0%, 6.3%, 60.0%, 23.5%, and 22.2%, respectively. Genetic analysis identified thirty, ten, and five strains based on <i>ssrA</i>, <i>rpoB</i>, and <i>gltA</i> genes, with nucleotide identities ranging from 92.1% to 100.0%. <i>Bartonella</i> strains were assigned to <i>B. grahamii</i>, <i>B. rochalimae</i>, <i>B. sendai</i>, <i>B. koshimizu</i>, <i>B. phoceensis</i>, <i>B. taylorii</i>, and a new species identified in <i>Episoriculus leucops</i> (GS136). Analysis of the different tissues naturally infected by <i>Bartonella</i> species revealed varied copy numbers across different tissues, with the highest load in spleen tissue. These findings underscore <i>Bartonella</i>&rsquo;s diverse species and host range in Yunnan Province, highlighting the presence of extensive tissue tropism in <i>Bartonella</i> species naturally infecting small mammalian tissues.application/pdfenCreative Commons Attribution 4.0 InternationalMolecular Prevalence, Genetic Diversity, and Tissue Tropism of Bartonella Species in Small Mammals from Yunnan Province, ChinaArticle - Refereed2024-05-10Animalshttps://doi.org/10.3390/ani14091320