Our previous report demonstrated that small wild rodents in Japan harbored two types of novel
Babesia microti-like parasites (Kobe and Hobetsu types), but not the type widely distributed throughout the temperate zones of North American and Eurasian Continents (U.S. type). In this study, we surveyed small wild mammals collected at various places in the northern part of Japan, seeking for U.S.-type
B. microti. A total of 197 small mammals comprising 10 species,
Apodemus speciosus, A. argenteus, Clethrionomys rufocanus, C. rutilus, Eothenomys andersoni, Microtus montebelli, Tamias sibiricus, Sorex unguiculatus, S. caecutiens, and
Urotrichus talpoides, were examined.
Babesia parasites were detected in
A. speciosus, C. rufocanus, C. rutilus, M. montebelli, S. unguiculatus, and
S. caecutiens by microscopy of blood smears and by PCR targeting babesial nuclear small-subunit rRNA (rDNA) and β-tubulin genes. Inoculation of their bloods into experimental animals gave rise to 23 parasite isolates, which included 16 from
A. speciosus, 4 from
C. rufocanus, and 1 each from
C. rutilus, M. montebelli and
S. unguiculatus. Sequencing analyses of their rDNA and β-tubulin genes revealed that, of the 23 isolates, 20 and 3 were of Hobetsu and U.S. types, respectively. The U.S.-type
B. microti strains isolated in Japan, however, were distinguishable from the isolates in the United States when their β-tubulin gene sequences and antigen profiles in Western blots were compared. We conclude that U.S.-type
B. microti exists in Japan although it has been genetically and antigenically diversified from that distributed in the United States. The results also suggest that not only rodents, but also some insectivores may serve as reservoirs for the agent of human babesiosis.
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