# Prevalence, Species Characterization, and Genetic Diversity of Bartonella Infections in Rodents From Mudflat Wetlands Along the Eastern Coast of Jiangsu Province in China

**Authors:** Chen Guoqing, Li Chunxiang, Cui Qian, Li Changcheng, Yang Pengfei, Yan Qingli, An Ran, Liu Wei, Li Feng, Lu Kuikui, Zhang Hongjun, Peng Haiyan

PMC · DOI: 10.1155/jotm/9926259 · 2025-04-23

## TL;DR

This study found Bartonella infections in rodents from coastal wetlands in eastern China, identifying three species and a potential new one.

## Contribution

The first evidence of Bartonella in rodents from China's eastern coastal wetlands and the identification of a possible new species.

## Key findings

- Six out of 29 rodents tested positive for Bartonella, with a 20.69% infection rate.
- Three Bartonella species were identified, including B. fuyuanensis, B. taylorii, and an undetermined species.
- Rodent populations were genetically diverse, with seven lineages of Apodemus agrarius identified.

## Abstract

Objective: To investigate the infection status, species composition, and genetic diversity of Bartonella in local rodent populations in coastal mudflat wetland habitats in eastern Jiangsu Province of China.

Methods: From March to June 2023, rodents were captured in mudflat wetlands of Dongtai and Tinghu Counties, Eastern China. Rodent species were identified, and nucleic acids were extracted from liver and spleen tissues. The mitochondrial cytochrome b (mt-cytb) gene was amplified by PCR, while Bartonella-specific citrate synthase (gltA) and 16S rRNA genes were amplified by semi-nested PCR. Phylogenetic and homology analyses were conducted to identify rodent and Bartonella species.

Results: Among 29 captured rodents, 26 were Apodemus agrarius and 3 were Mus musculus. Phylogenetic analysis of the mt-cytb gene divided A. agrarius into 7 lineages, each linked to geographically diverse Bartonella populations. Six A. agrarius rodents tested positive for Bartonella, with a positivity rate of 20.69%. Phylogenetic analyses revealed three Bartonella species: B. fuyuanensis, B. taylorii, and one undetermined species. The infected Bartonella strains clustered into three evolutionary branches based on gltA and 16S rRNA genes.

Conclusions: This study provides the first evidence of Bartonella infection among rodent populations in wetland habitats along China's eastern coast. The region harbors diverse rodent species, with a high Bartonella infection rate, and at least three species were identified, including a potential novel species.

## Linked entities

- **Genes:** CYTB (mitochondrial Cytochrome b) [NCBI Gene 19893556], gltA (citrate synthase) [NCBI Gene 882117], 16S rRNA (16S ribosomal RNA) [NCBI Gene 2597965]
- **Species:** Apodemus agrarius (taxon 39030), Mus musculus (taxon 10090), Bartonella fuyuanensis (taxon 1460968), Bartonella taylorii (taxon 33046)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** infection (MESH:D007239)
- **Species:** Mus musculus (house mouse, species) [taxon 10090], Bartonella fuyuanensis (species) [taxon 1460968], Bartonella (genus) [taxon 773], Bartonella taylorii (species) [taxon 33046], Apodemus agrarius (Eurasian field mouse, species) [taxon 39030]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12043437/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12043437