Determination of the feeding behavior of Phlebotomus sergenti using multiplex PCR and tent-baited traps in a new focus of Anthroponotic Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in the southeast of Iran

Exp Parasitol. 2023 Jan:244:108426. doi: 10.1016/j.exppara.2022.108426. Epub 2022 Nov 16.

Abstract

Objectives: This study aimed to determine feeding behaviors of Phlebotomus sergenti Parrot, in a new focus of Anthroponotic Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in Bam County, southeast Iran.

Methods: Two methods were used to determine the feeding behavior of Phlebotomus sergenti. In the first method, blood-fed sand flies were captured using a mouth aspirator in human and animal dwellings and consequently, blood meal identification was made using Multiplex PCR. The results were used for calculating Host Feeding Index (HFI) and Forage Ratio (FR) parameters. In the second method, human (Homo sapiens), goat (Capra aegagrus), cattle (Bos taurus), chicken (Gallus gallus) and dog (Canis lupus) were used as baits in tent-baited traps to determine the feeding behavior of Phlebotomus sergenti.

Results: Multiplex PCR analysis revealed that the most frequent blood in the stomack of sand flies' were from chicken, but the calculation of the FR revealed that this species prefers canine and poultary blood as meal. Human and animal tent-baited traps revealed that most Phlebotomus sergenti were attracted to chicken rather than the other hosts.

Conclusions: Sand flies are attracted to animals for various reasons such as eating blood, mating on their bodies and laying eggs on their feces. Molecular methods are effective and accurate methods to determine the type of host that sandfly fed on, but they do not show host preferences. The results of the molecular analysis, along with the calculation of HFI and FR, can determine the preferred host of sand flies. The current study revealed that dogs, the secondary reservoir of ACL in Iran, is the first preferred host of Phlebotomus sergenti.

Keywords: Blood-meal; Host preference, Multiplex PCR; Iran; Phlebotomus sergenti.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cattle
  • Dogs
  • Feeding Behavior
  • Humans
  • Iran
  • Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous*
  • Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction
  • Phlebotomus*
  • Psychodidae*