4.4. Order
Rodentia
Rodents are the most diverse and widespread order of mammals and include several cryptic species that can only be separated by karyotyping ( Bonvicino et al., 2002). The first rodents (
Hystricognathi
– caviomorphs) arrived in the Americas (along with primates) from Africa approximately 45 million years ago. The second wave of rodent migration to the Americas (Sciurognathi – cricetids) was much more recent and included an initial establishment in North America ( Flynn and Wyss, 1998). Since their arrival, rodents have diversified widely and may be found in desert, adapted to aquatic media, digging long and interconnected tunnels, and in forest canopies ( Wilson and Reeder, 2005). This taxon is most likely the most studied in terms of infection by
Leishmania spp.
in both natural and experimental conditions; however, excepting a few studies, experimental infections have been conducted in laboratory mouse lineages, which are not representative of the wild
Mus musculus
.
After the
Pilosa, Marsupialia
and
Cingulata
, caviomorphs (suborder
Hystricognathi
) are most likely the most ancient hosts of
Leishmania spp.
Moreover, their arrival in the Americas is related to the entry of some species from the sub-genus
Leishmania
into the continent ( Thomaz-Soccol et al., 1993). Caviomorphs from the genus
Proechimys
were already found to be infected by various
Leishmania species.
These rodents are characterized by their longevity (more than 3 years in captivity) and high abundance in most localities where they are found in tropical forests of Central and South America ( Ashford, 1996). Various Proechimys species have been identified as potential reservoirs of
L. amazonensis
in Brazil and French Guiana, as demonstrated by the frequent skin parasitism confirmed by tissue culture ( Arias et al., 1981; Dedet et al., 1989). In French Guiana, for example, this infection was observed in two sympatric species,
P. cuvieri
and
P. guyanensis ( Rotureau, 2006)
. Other reports of natural infection in the skin of these rodents include:
L. infantum
in
P. canicollis
from Colombia ( Travi et al., 1998a), and
L. guyanensis
in
Proechimys sp.
from French Guiana ( Dedet et al., 1989), and Brazil ( Lainson et al., 1981a) ( Table 1).
P. semispinosus
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from Colombia experimentally infected with
L. panamensis
developed self resolving non-ulcerated lesions (from which parasites could be re-isolated, and which were demonstrated to be highly infective to vectors in the initial phase of
infection ( Travi et al., 2002)
. This host–parasite interaction exemplifies a temporal reservoir competence in one host species, passing from an amplifier host (in the beginning of infection) to a maintenance host, in which transmissibility competence is lower. In contrast, the same rodent species experimentally infected with
L. infantum
developed only subclinical infection and was not infective to vectors, although the authors re-isolated the parasites from the spleen of some rodents during necropsy ( Travi et al., 2002). Other authors have detected no infection in laboratory-bred specimens of another species,
P. guyannensis
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, after inoculation with promastigotes or amastigotes of
L. infantum ( Lainson et al., 2002)
. This difference may be due to many variables related to the host and the parasite, such as the intra-specific heterogeneity of both taxa and/or the size and route of the inoculum.
Considered monospecific until 2002, caviomorphs from the genus
Thrichomys
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comprise at least five cryptic species distributed across different biomes in Brazil ( Bonvicino et al., 2002).
T. apereoides
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were found to be infected with
L. braziliensis
,
L. guyanensis
,
L. infantum
and
L. amazonensis
in leishmaniasis-endemic areas in Minas Gerais, Brazil ( Oliveira et al., 2005; Quaresma et al., 2011). Recently, we also detected infection by various Leishmania species in these rodents:
L. infantum
,
L. naiffi
,
L. braziliensis
and
L. shawi
in
T. laurentius
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,
L. shawi
in
T. inermis
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and
L. naiffi
in
T. pachyurus
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(Cássia-Pires et al., unpublished data). Moreover,
T. laurentius
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experimentally infected with
L. infantum
and
L. braziliensis
were able to maintain the infection and parasite re-isolation was achieved up to 12 months after infection.
Leishmania DNA
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was detected in all experimental groups and in all tissues sampled, independent of the Leishmania species inoculated ( Roque et al., 2010).
In addition to
Proechimys spp.
and
Thrichomys spp.
,
L. infantum
has been diagnosed in
Clyomys laticeps
,
Dasyprocta azarae
,
Nectomys squamipes
,
Holochilus sciureus
and
Rhipidomys mastacalis
from Brazil (Cássia-Pires et al., unpublished data; Dantas-Torres and Brandão-Filho, 2006; Quaresma et al., 2011; Lima et al., 2013;) and
Rattus rattus
from Brazil and Venezuela ( Quinnell and Courtenay, 2009). Natural infection of
Coendu prehensilis
, used as sentinels in Bolivia, has been parasitologically confirmed in the liver and spleen ( Le Pont et al., 1989).
Regarding
L. braziliensis
, if we consider only studies that confirmed the identity of the etiological agent (not considering the ancient
L. braziliensis
sensu lato), the following rodent species have been described to be naturally infected:
Akodon arviculoides
,
Mus musculus
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,
Nectomys squamipes
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,
Necromys
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(=
Bolomys
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)
lasiurus
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,
Oryzomys nigripes
,
Rattus rattus
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and
Sigmodon hispidus
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( Brandão-Filho et al., 2003; de Freitas et al., 2012; De Lima et al., 2002; Forattini et al., 1972; Peterson et al., 1988; Rocha et al., 1988; Vasconcelos et al., 1994). In other cases, the authors confirmed infection by the subgenus
Leishmania (Viannia)
sp. (
Holochilus scieurus
and
Cerradomys subflavus
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) ( Brandão-Filho et al., 2003; Lima et al., 2013) or tentatively identified the etiological agent through the biological pattern of in vitro growth (
Rhipidomys leucodactylus
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and
Proechimys guyannensis
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) ( Lainson et al., 1981b).
Rodents are also usually considered as the main reservoirs of
Leishmania
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from the
L. mexicana
complex (
L. mexicana
and
L. amazonensis
).
L. amazonensis
was described in rodents from the following genera:
Akodon
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,
Dasyprocta
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Oligoryzomys
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,
Oryzomys
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,
Proechimys
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,
Thrichomys
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and
Sciurus
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( Arias et al., 1981; Kerr et al., 2006; Lainson et al., 1981b; Mimori et al., 1989; Oliveira et al., 2005; Telleria et al., 1999). None of these studies, however, included follow-up of the infection or demonstrated competence to infect vectors.
L. mexicana
has been isolated from various species of
Neotoma
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, including a specimen of
N. floridana
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with a large lesion in the ear from which the parasite could be isolated ( Kerr et al., 1995; McHugh et al., 2003). This finding was informative, suggesting that this rodent species may be infective for the vector and an important reservoir of
L. mexicana
.
Ototylomys phyllotis
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from Belize should be considered as a possible reservoir of
L. mexicana
because of its relative abundance, prevalence of infection and attraction to
Lu. flaviscutellata
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, the most important vector in the region. Curiously, the same author failed to reproduce this infection under experimental conditions ( Ashford, 1996), possibly due to factors occurring only in nature, such as stress and concomitant infections, which may be important for the establishment of
Leishmania infection
. This situation highlights the importance of the studies of naturally infected specimens and the difficulties of adopting potential reservoir hosts as alternative models for leishmaniasis studies. Moreover, these findings attest to the hazards of applying conclusions based solely on experimental models to natural systems.
The persistence of
L. mexicana
infection in wild rodents was demonstrated twice. The first such finding occurred in Mexico, where 29 naturally infected rodents were maintained in captivity and tested monthly for parasites for up to 2 years. In that study, the authors demonstrated persistent infection, including symptomatic infections, in
Sigmodon hispidus
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,
Oryzomys melanotis
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,
Ototylomys phyllotis
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and
Peromyscus yucatanicus
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, the latter two being the most important because of their high relative abundance in local fauna and longer life spans ( Van Wynsberghe et al., 2000). Second, in the United States, during a 19-month mark–release–recapture study of
Neotoma micropus
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, the authors reported the persistence of
L. mexicana
infection for up to 1 year ( Raymond et al., 2003).
Heteromys
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,
Nyctomys
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and
Reithrodontomys
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were also found infected with
L. mexicana
( Ashford, 1996; De Lima et al., 2002; Disney, 1968; Lainson and Strangways-Dixon, 1964; Van Wynsberghe et al., 2009).
Leishmania lainsoni
was isolated from fragments of intact skin from pacas (
Agouti paca
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) in the Brazilian state of Pará ( Silveira et al., 1991) and from
Coendu sp.
( Table 1).
Leishmania panamensis
was isolated from naturally infected
Heteromys dermarestianus
from Costa Rica ( Zeledon et al., 1977), while a squirrel
Scirus granatensis
was found to be infected with
L. equatorensis
in Ecuador ( Grimaldi et al., 1992).
Leishmania peruviana
, a species suggested to be a synonym of
L. braziliensis
, was isolated from the Peruvian
Phyllotis
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andinum ( Llanos-Cuentas et al., 1999). Finally,
L. hertigi
/
L. deanei
and
L. enriettii
, species taxonomically more similar to
Endotrypanum
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than to
Leishmania
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have been described, respectively, in porcupines
Coendu spp.
( Herrer, 1971; Silva et al., 2013) and in the guinea pig
Cavia porcellus ( Machado et al., 1994)
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.
Taken together, a broad diversity of Leishmania species naturally infect this mammal group, most likely reflecting the diversity of ecological niches occupied by the hosts. The differences observed among the rodent species include the forest strata they occupy and their reproductive strategies (seasonality, gestation time and number of offspring), and these traits should be considered evaluations of the importance of a rodent species as a
Leishmania
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reservoir. Moreover, as expected for every host–parasite interaction, this heterogeneous mammalian taxon shows a spectrum of competence to maintain and transmit
Leishmania
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from high susceptibility with high transmissibility competence to quick control of infection.