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1.
On 12 November 2019, one couple from the Sonid Left Qi (County) in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region was diagnosed with pneumonic plague in Beijing. The wife acquired the infection from her husband. Thereafter, two bubonic plague cases were identified in Inner Mongolia on November 16th and 24th. In this study, genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis was used to identify the phylogenetic relationship of Yersinia pestis strains isolated in Inner Mongolia. Strains isolated from reservoirs in 2018 and 2019 in Inner Mongolia, together with the strain isolated from Patient C, were further clustered into 2.MED3m, and two novel lineages (2.MED3q, 2.MED3r) in the 2.MED3 population. According to the analysis of PCR-based molecular subtyping methods, such as the MLVA 14 scheme and seven SNP allele sequencing, Patients A/B and D were classified as 2.MED3m. In addition, strains from rodents living near the patients’ residences were clustered into the same lineage as patients. Such observations indicated that human plague cases originated from local reservoirs. Corresponding phylogenetic analysis also indicated that rodent plague strains in different areas in Inner Mongolia belong to different epizootics rather than being caused by spreading from the same epizootic in Meriones unguiculatus in 2019.  相似文献   

2.
The potential use of CRISPR loci genotyping to elucidate population dynamics and microevolution of 146 Yersinia pestis strains from different biovars and locations was investigated in this work. The majority of strains from the Orientalis biovar presented specific spacer arrays, allowing for the establishment of a CRISPR signature for their respective isolates. Twenty-one new spacers were found in the Y. pestis strains from plague foci in Brazil. Ninety-three (64%) strains were grouped in the G1 genotype, whereas the others were distributed in 35 genotypes. This study allowed observing a microevolutionary process in a group of Y. pestis isolated from Brazil. We also identified specific genotypes of Y. pestis that were important for the establishment of the bacteria in plague foci in Brazil. The data have provided supporting evidence for the diversity and dynamics of CRISPR loci present in the genome of Y. pestis strains from plague foci in Brazil.  相似文献   

3.
Li Y  Dai E  Cui Y  Li M  Zhang Y  Wu M  Zhou D  Guo Z  Dai X  Cui B  Qi Z  Wang Z  Wang H  Dong X  Song Z  Zhai J  Song Y  Yang R 《PloS one》2008,3(5):e2166

Background

DFR (different region) analysis has been developed for typing Yesinia pestis in our previous study, and in this study, we extended this method by using 23 DFRs to investigate 909 Chinese Y. pestis strains for validating DFR-based genotyping method and better understanding adaptive microevolution of Y. pestis.

Methodology/Principal Findings

On the basis of PCR and Bionumerics data analysis, 909 Y. pestis strains were genotyped into 32 genomovars according to their DFR profiles. New terms, Major genomovar and Minor genomovar, were coined for illustrating evolutionary relationship between Y. pestis strains from different plague foci and different hosts. In silico DFR profiling of the completed or draft genomes shed lights on the evolutionary scenario of Y. pestis from Y. pseudotuberculosis. Notably, several sequenced Y. pestis strains share the same DFR profiles with Chinese strains, providing data for revealing the global plague foci expansion.

Conclusions/significance

Distribution of Y. pestis genomovars is plague focus-specific. Microevolution of biovar Orientalis was deduced according to DFR profiles. DFR analysis turns to be an efficient and inexpensive method to portrait the genome plasticity of Y. pestis based on horizontal gene transfer (HGT). DFR analysis can also be used as a tool in comparative and evolutionary genomic research for other bacteria with similar genome plasticity.  相似文献   

4.

Background

Whole genome sequencing allowed the development of a number of high resolution sequence based typing tools for Yersinia (Y.) pestis. The application of these methods on isolates from most known foci worldwide and in particular from China and the Former Soviet Union has dramatically improved our understanding of the population structure of this species. In the current view, Y. pestis including the non or moderate human pathogen Y. pestis subspecies microtus emerged from Yersinia pseudotuberculosis about 2,600 to 28,600 years ago in central Asia. The majority of central Asia natural foci have been investigated. However these investigations included only few strains from Mongolia.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Prokaryotic Repeats (CRISPR) analysis and Multiple-locus variable number of tandem repeats (VNTR) analysis (MLVA) with 25 loci was performed on 100 Y. pestis strains, isolated from 37 sampling areas in Mongolia. The resulting data were compared with previously published data from more than 500 plague strains, 130 of which had also been previously genotyped by single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis. The comparison revealed six main clusters including the three microtus biovars Ulegeica, Altaica, and Xilingolensis. The largest cluster comprises 78 isolates, with unique and new genotypes seen so far in Mongolia only. Typing of selected isolates by key SNPs was used to robustly assign the corresponding clusters to previously defined SNP branches.

Conclusions/Significance

We show that Mongolia hosts the most recent microtus clade (Ulegeica). Interestingly no representatives of the ancestral Y. pestis subspecies pestis nodes previously identified in North-western China were identified in this study. This observation suggests that the subsequent evolution steps within Y. pestis pestis did not occur in Mongolia. Rather, Mongolia was most likely re-colonized by more recent clades coming back from China contemporary of the black death pandemic, or more recently in the past 600 years.  相似文献   

5.
Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague, is a deadly bacterium that affects humans. Strain D106004 was isolated from a new plague focus in Yulong County, China, in 2006. To gain insights into the epidemic origin, we have sequenced the genomes of D106004 and strains Z176003 and D182038, isolated from neighboring regions.This article describes genomic comparisons between three respective Yersinia pestis strains isolated from new natural plague foci in China. Y. pestis strain D106004 was isolated from Apodemus chevrieri in Yulong County in 2006, and its genome was compared to those of strain D182038 (isolated from A. chevrieri in 1982 from Jianchuan County) and strain Z176003 (isolated from Marmota himalayana in 1976 in Naqu [Tibet] County).Between 25 October 2005 and 2 November 2005, there was an outbreak of pneumonic plague in Yulong, which was identified as a new natural plague focus (13). The primary Y. pestis reservoirs associated with this outbreak were A. chevrieri, Eothenmys miletus, and Apodemus latronum, and the primary vectors associated with plague transmission were also identified as similar to what was observed in neighboring Jianchuan County (7). However, the Y. pestis strain identified metabolized maltose significantly differently than the previously described strains (6).Whole-genome shotgun and solexa methods were used, as previously described (3), to compare the Y. pestis D106004, D182038, and Z176003 sequences, which consisted of 475, 385, and 413 contigs, respectively, resulting in an average 9-fold coverage across the genomes. All isolates examined possessed a single circular chromosome with the three virulence plasmids (pMT, pCD, and pPCP) associated with classical Y. pestis strains. Automated gene modeling was carried out using the Glimmer3 software program (11) in addition to comparing the respective gene products using the Nt, Nr, KEGG, Swissprot, and COG databases using the basic local alignment search tool for proteins (BLASTP). Open reading frames (ORFs) in the respective 4,626,944-bp, 4,640,720-bp, and 4,553,586-bp genomes of strains D182038, D106004, and Z176003 were predicted to be of 3,642, 3,636, 3,543, and more than 300 bp in length. Strains D182038, D106004, and Z176003 each had six rRNA (16S-23S-5S) genes and 73 (D182038), 70 (D106004), or 68 (Z176003) tRNA genes predicted by the tRNAScan-SE server (9).Comparison of Y. pestis strains 91001 and KIM to Y. pestis strain CO92 identified genetic rearrangements (5, 10, 12) resulting from insertion sequences (2), and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) profile comparisons between D182038 and D106004 suggested that genomic variability of the Y. pestis strains from different foci was caused by genome rearrangement (16). According to our analyses, the Y. pestis strains isolated from the two foci have very different syntenic structures due to rearrangement, but they share high similarity between plates (8). In addition, a unique multiple-locus variable-number tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) type was defined for the strains isolated from Yulong, indicating a new clonal group. These results also suggested that the Yulong strains were closely related to the strains from the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau plague foci (15). Analysis of Y. pestis microevolution has been made possible by comparing single- nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) profiles as previously described (1, 4, 14).The availability of high-quality sequences is crucial in order to resolve the origins of the new strains isolated from natural plague foci.  相似文献   

6.
To gain insights into the origin and genome evolution of the plague bacterium Yersinia pestis, we have sequenced the deep-rooted strain Angola, a virulent Pestoides isolate. Its ancient nature makes this atypical isolate of particular importance in understanding the evolution of plague pathogenicity. Its chromosome features a unique genetic make-up intermediate between modern Y. pestis isolates and its evolutionary ancestor, Y. pseudotuberculosis. Our genotypic and phenotypic analyses led us to conclude that Angola belongs to one of the most ancient Y. pestis lineages thus far sequenced. The mobilome carries the first reported chimeric plasmid combining the two species-specific virulence plasmids. Genomic findings were validated in virulence assays demonstrating that its pathogenic potential is distinct from modern Y. pestis isolates. Human infection with this particular isolate would not be diagnosed by the standard clinical tests, as Angola lacks the plasmid-borne capsule, and a possible emergence of this genotype raises major public health concerns. To assess the genomic plasticity in Y. pestis, we investigated the global gene reservoir and estimated the pangenome at 4,844 unique protein-coding genes. As shown by the genomic analysis of this evolutionary key isolate, we found that the genomic plasticity within Y. pestis clearly was not as limited as previously thought, which is strengthened by the detection of the largest number of isolate-specific single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) currently reported in the species. This study identified numerous novel genetic signatures, some of which seem to be intimately associated with plague virulence. These markers are valuable in the development of a robust typing system critical for forensic, diagnostic, and epidemiological studies.Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague, is a nonmotile Gram-negative bacterial pathogen. The genus Yersinia comprises two other pathogens that cause worldwide infections in humans and animals: Y. pseudotuberculosis and Y. enterocolitica (11, 12, 22, 61, 71). Despite their genetic relationship, these species differ radically in their pathogenicity and transmission. Plague is primarily a disease of wild rodents that is transmitted to other mammals through flea bites. In humans it produces the bubonic form of plague. Y. pestis also can be transmitted from human to human by aerosol, especially during pandemics, causing primarily pneumonic plague. Evolutionarily, it is estimated that Y. pestis diverged from the enteric pathogen Y. pseudotuberculosis within the last 20,000 years, while Y. pseudotuberculosis and Y. enterocolitica lineages separated 0.4 to 1.9 million years ago (2). Y. pestis inhabits a distinct ecological niche, and its transmission is anchored in its unique plasmid inventory: the murine toxin (pMT) and plasminogen activator (pPCP) plasmids. In addition, Y. pestis harbors the low-calcium-response plasmid pCD, which it inherited from its closest relative, Y. pseudotuberculosis (pYV) (12), and it also is found in the more distantly related Y. enterocolitica (71). So-called cryptic plasmids have been described in the literature as part of the Y. pestis mobilome (71), but no sequence data are available to decipher the nature and impact of such plasmids in the epidemiology and pathogenicity of Y. pestis (14). Y. pestis isolates have been historically grouped into the biovars Antiqua (ANT), Medievalis (MED), and Orientalis (ORI), based on metabolic properties such as nitrate reduction and fermentation patterns (72). However, we will use the population-based nomenclature for Y. pestis introduced by Achtman et al. (1), as we believe it better reflects the true evolutionary relationship. Due to its young evolutionary age, only a few genetic polymorphisms have been identified within the Y. pestis genomes sequenced to date (1). Here, we report the comparative analysis of the virulent Y. pestis strain Angola, a representative of one of the most ancient Y. pestis lineages thus far sequenced. We studied adaptive microevolutionary traits Y. pestis has acquired and predicted the global Yersinia pangenome. By comparing the genomes of the three human pathogenic Yersinia species (12, 22), we investigated the global- and species-specific gene reservoir, the genome dynamics, and the degree of genetic diversity that is found within these species. Our genotypic and phenotypic analyses, as well as the refined single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based phylogeny of Y. pestis, indicate that Angola is a deep-rooted isolate with unique genome characteristics intermediate between modern Y. pestis isolates and Y. pseudotuberculosis.  相似文献   

7.
Plague, a zoonosis caused by Yersinia pestis, is still found in Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Madagascar reports almost one third of the cases worldwide. Y. pestis can be encountered in three very different types of foci: urban, rural, and sylvatic. Flea vector and wild rodent host population dynamics are tightly correlated with modulation of climatic conditions, an association that could be crucial for both the maintenance of foci and human plague epidemics. The black rat Rattus rattus, the main host of Y. pestis in Madagascar, is found to exhibit high resistance to plague in endemic areas, opposing the concept of high mortality rates among rats exposed to the infection. Also, endemic fleas could play an essential role in maintenance of the foci. This review discusses recent advances in the understanding of the role of these factors as well as human behavior in the persistence of plague in Madagascar.  相似文献   

8.

Background

Yersinia pestis, the pathogen of plague, has greatly influenced human history on a global scale. Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeat (CRISPR), an element participating in immunity against phages'' invasion, is composed of short repeated sequences separated by unique spacers and provides the basis of the spoligotyping technology. In the present research, three CRISPR loci were analyzed in 125 strains of Y. pestis from 26 natural plague foci of China, the former Soviet Union and Mongolia were analyzed, for validating CRISPR-based genotyping method and better understanding adaptive microevolution of Y. pestis.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Using PCR amplification, sequencing and online data processing, a high degree of genetic diversity was revealed in all three CRISPR elements. The distribution of spacers and their arrays in Y. pestis strains is strongly region and focus-specific, allowing the construction of a hypothetic evolutionary model of Y. pestis. This model suggests transmission route of microtus strains that encircled Takla Makan Desert and ZhunGer Basin. Starting from Tadjikistan, one branch passed through the Kunlun Mountains, and moved to the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. Another branch went north via the Pamirs Plateau, the Tianshan Mountains, the Altai Mountains and the Inner Mongolian Plateau. Other Y. pestis lineages might be originated from certain areas along those routes.

Conclusions/significance

CRISPR can provide important information for genotyping and evolutionary research of bacteria, which will help to trace the source of outbreaks. The resulting data will make possible the development of very low cost and high-resolution assays for the systematic typing of any new isolate.  相似文献   

9.

Background

Rhombomys opimus (great gerbil) is a reservoir of Yersinia pestis in the natural plague foci of Central Asia. Great gerbils are highly resistant to Y. pestis infection. The coevolution of great gerbils and Y. pestis is believed to play an important role in the plague epidemics in Central Asia plague foci. However, the dynamics of Y. pestis infection and the corresponding antibody response in great gerbils have not been evaluated. In this report, animal experiments were employed to investigate the bacterial load in both the liver and spleen of infected great gerbils. The dynamics of the antibody response to the F1 capsule antigen of Y. pestis was also determined.

Methodology

Captured great gerbils that tested negative for both anti-F1 antibodies and bacterial isolation were infected subcutaneously with different doses (105 to 1011 CFU) of a Y. pestis strain isolated from a live great gerbil during routine plague surveillance in the Junggar Basin, Xinjiang, China. The clinical manifestations, changes in body weight, anal temperature, and gross anatomy of the infected animals were observed. The blood cell count, bacterial load, and anti-F1 antibody titers were determined at different time points after infection using a blood analyzer, plate counts, and an indirect hemagglutination assay, respectively.

Conclusions/Significance

The dynamics of bacterial load and the anti-F1 antibody concentration in great gerbils are highly variable among individuals. The Y. pestis infection in great gerbils could persist as long as 15 days. They act as an appropriate reservoir for plague in the Junggar Basin, which is part of the natural plague foci in Central Asia. The dynamics of the Y. pestis susceptibility of great gerbil will improve the understanding of its variable resistance, which would facilitate the development of more effective countermeasures for controlling plague epidemics in this focus.  相似文献   

10.

Background

Plague was introduced to Madagascar in 1898 and continues to be a significant human health problem. It exists mainly in the central highlands, but in the 1990s was reintroduced to the port city of Mahajanga, where it caused extensive human outbreaks. Despite its prevalence, the phylogeography and molecular epidemiology of Y. pestis in Madagascar has been difficult to study due to the great genetic similarity among isolates. We examine island-wide geographic-genetic patterns based upon whole-genome discovery of SNPs, SNP genotyping and hypervariable variable-number tandem repeat (VNTR) loci to gain insight into the maintenance and spread of Y. pestis in Madagascar.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We analyzed a set of 262 Malagasy isolates using a set of 56 SNPs and a 43-locus multi-locus VNTR analysis (MLVA) system. We then analyzed the geographic distribution of the subclades and identified patterns related to the maintenance and spread of plague in Madagascar. We find relatively high levels of VNTR diversity in addition to several SNP differences. We identify two major groups, Groups I and II, which are subsequently divided into 11 and 4 subclades, respectively. Y. pestis appears to be maintained in several geographically separate subpopulations. There is also evidence for multiple long distance transfers of Y. pestis, likely human mediated. Such transfers have resulted in the reintroduction and establishment of plague in the port city of Mahajanga, where there is evidence for multiple transfers both from and to the central highlands.

Conclusions/Significance

The maintenance and spread of Y. pestis in Madagascar is a dynamic and highly active process that relies on the natural cycle between the primary host, the black rat, and its flea vectors as well as human activity.  相似文献   

11.

Background

The species Yersinia pestis is commonly divided into three classical biovars, Antiqua, Medievalis, and Orientalis, belonging to subspecies pestis pathogenic for human and the (atypical) non-human pathogenic biovar Microtus (alias Pestoides) including several non-pestis subspecies. Recent progress in molecular typing methods enables large-scale investigations in the population structure of this species. It is now possible to test hypotheses about its evolution which were proposed decades ago. For instance the three classical biovars of different geographical distributions were suggested to originate from Central Asia. Most investigations so far have focused on the typical pestis subspecies representatives found outside of China, whereas the understanding of the emergence of this human pathogen requires the investigation of strains belonging to subspecies pestis from China and to the Microtus biovar.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Multi-locus VNTR analysis (MLVA) with 25 loci was performed on a collection of Y. pestis isolates originating from the majority of the known foci worldwide and including typical rhamnose-negative subspecies pestis as well as rhamnose-positive subspecies pestis and biovar Microtus. More than 500 isolates from China, the Former Soviet Union (FSU), Mongolia and a number of other foci around the world were characterized and resolved into 350 different genotypes. The data revealed very close relationships existing between some isolates from widely separated foci as well as very high diversity which can conversely be observed between nearby foci.

Conclusions/Significance

The results obtained are in full agreement with the view that the Y. pestis subsp. pestis pathogenic for humans emerged in the Central Asia region between China, Kazakhstan, Russia and Mongolia, only three clones of which spread out of Central Asia. The relationships among the strains in China, Central Asia and the rest of the world based on the MLVA25 assay provide an unprecedented view on the expansion and microevolution of Y. pestis.  相似文献   

12.
Plague, caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, is a mammalian vector-borne disease, transmitted by fleas that serve as the vector between rodent hosts. For many pathogens, including Y. pestis, there are strong evolutionary pressures that lead to a reduction in ‘useless genes'', with only those retained that reflect function in the specific environment inhabited by the pathogen. Genetic traits critical for survival and transmission between two environments, the rodent and the flea, are conserved in epizootic/epidemic plague strains. However, there are genes that remain conserved for which no function in the flea–rodent cycle has yet been observed, indicating an additional environment may exist in the transmission cycle of plague. Here, we present evidence for highly conserved genes that suggests a role in the persistence of Y. pestis after death of its host. Furthermore, maintenance of these genes points to Y. pestis traversing a post-mortem path between, and possibly within, epizootic periods and offering insight into mechanisms that may allow Y. pestis an alternative route of transmission in the natural environment.  相似文献   

13.
Although Yersinia pestis epidemic biovars and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis are recently diverged, highly related species, they cause different diseases via disparate transmission routes. Since iron transport systems are important for iron acquisition from hosts and for survival in the environment, we have analyzed potential iron transport systems encoded by epidemic and non-epidemic or endemic strains of Y. pestis as well as two virulent Y. pseudotuberculosis strains. Computational biology analysis of these genomes showed a high degree of identity/similarity among 16 proven or possible iron/heme transporters identified. Of these, 7 systems were essentially the same in all seven genomes analyzed. The remaining 9 loci had 2–6 genetic variations among these genomes. Two untested, potential siderophore-dependent systems appear intact in Y. pseudotuberculosis but are disrupted or absent in all the endemic Y. pestis strains as well as the epidemic strains from the antiqua and mediaevalis biovars. Only one of these two loci are obviously disrupted in Y. pestis CO92 (epidemic orientalis biovar). Experimental studies failed to identify a role for hemin uptake systems in the virulence of pneumonic plague and suggest that Y. pestis CO92 does not make a siderophore other than Ybt.  相似文献   

14.
Plague, initiated by Yersinia pestis infection, is a rapidly progressing disease with a high mortality rate if not quickly treated. The existence of antibiotic-resistant Y. pestis strains emphasizes the need for the development of novel countermeasures against plague. We previously reported the generation of a recombinant Y. pestis strain (Kim53ΔJ+P) that over-expresses Y. enterocolitica YopP. When this strain was administered subcutaneously to mice, it elicited a fast and effective protective immune response in models of bubonic, pneumonic and septicemic plague. In the present study, we further characterized the immune response induced by the Kim53ΔJ+P recombinant strain. Using a panel of mouse strains defective in specific immune functions, we observed the induction of a prompt protective innate immune response that was interferon-γ dependent. Moreover, inoculation of mice with Y. pestis Kim53ΔJ+P elicited a rapid protective response against secondary infection by other bacterial pathogens, including the enteropathogen Y. enterocolitica and the respiratory pathogen Francisella tularensis. Thus, the development of new therapies to enhance the innate immune response may provide an initial critical delay in disease progression following the exposure to highly virulent bacterial pathogens, extending the time window for successful treatment.  相似文献   

15.
The nucleotide sequences of the Tc’s insect toxin complex genes have been analyzed in 18 natural strains of the main and non-main subspecies of Yersinia pestis isolated in different natural foci in the Russian Federation, as well as neighboring and more remote countries, as compared to the data on Y. pestis and Y. pseudotuberculosis strains stored in the NCBI GenBank database. The nucleotide sequences of these genes in plague agent strains have been found to be highly conserved, in contrast to those of the pseudotuberculosis agent. The sequences of two genes, tcaC and tccC2, have been found to be almost identical in Y. pestis strains, whereas other three genes (tcaA, tcaB, and tccC1) contain a few mutations, which, however, are not common for all strains of the plague agent. Exceptions are only strains of the Y. pestis biovar orientalis, whose tcaB gene is in a nonfunctional state due to a nucleotide deletion. The results suggest that the formation of the species Y. pestis as an agent of a natural focal infection with a transmissive mechanism has not resulted in degradation of the Tc’s complex genes. Instead, these genes are likely to have been altered as the plague agent have been adapting to the new environment.  相似文献   

16.
The successful reconstruction of an ancient bacterial genome from archaeological material presents an important methodological advancement for infectious disease research. The reliability of evolutionary histories inferred by the incorporation of ancient data, however, are highly contingent upon the level of genetic diversity represented in modern genomic sequences that are publicly accessible, and the paucity of available complete genomes restricts the level of phylogenetic resolution that can be obtained. Here we add to our original analysis of the Yersinia pestis strain implicated in the Black Death by consolidating our dataset for 18 modern genomes with single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data for an additional 289 strains at over 600 positions. The inclusion of this additional data reveals a cluster of Y. pestis strains that diverge at a time significantly in advance of the Black Death, with divergence dates roughly coincident with the Plague of Justinian (6th to 8th century AD). In addition, the analysis reveals further clues regarding potential radiation events that occurred immediately preceding the Black Death, and the legacy it may have left in modern Y. pestis populations. This work reiterates the need for more publicly available complete genomes, both modern and ancient, to achieve an accurate understanding of the history of this bacterium.  相似文献   

17.
It has long been theorized that deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) are a primary reservoir of Yersinia pestis in California. However, recent research from other parts of the western USA has implicated deer mice as spillover hosts during epizootic plague transmission. This retrospective study analyzed deer mouse data collected for plague surveillance by public health agencies in California from 1971 to 2016 to help elucidate the role of deer mice in plague transmission. The fleas most commonly found on deer mice were poor vectors of Y. pestis and occurred in insufficient numbers to maintain transmission of the pathogen, while fleas whose natural hosts are deer mice were rarely observed and even more rarely found infected with Y. pestis on other rodent hosts. Seroprevalence of Y. pestis antibodies in deer mice was significantly lower than that of several chipmunk and squirrel species. These analyses suggest that it is unlikely that deer mice play an important role in maintaining plague transmission in California. While they may not be primary reservoirs, results supported the premise that deer mice are occasionally exposed to and infected by Y. pestis and instead may be spillover hosts.  相似文献   

18.

Background  

Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague, is a pathogen with a tremendous ability to cause harm and panic in populations. Due to the severity of plague and its potential for use as a bioweapon, better preventatives and therapeutics for plague are desirable. Subunit vaccines directed against the F1 capsular antigen and the V antigen (also known as LcrV) of Y. pestis are under development. However, these new vaccine formulations have some possible limitations. The F1 antigen is not required for full virulence of Y. pestis and LcrV has a demonstrated immunosuppressive effect. These limitations could damper the ability of F1/LcrV based vaccines to protect against F1-minus Y. pestis strains and could lead to a high rate of undesired side effects in vaccinated populations. For these reasons, the use of other antigens in a plague vaccine formulation may be advantageous.  相似文献   

19.
Yersinia pestis 201 contains 4 plasmids pPCP1, pMT1, pCD1 and pCRY, but little is known about the effects of these plasmids on the dissemination of Y. pestis. We developed a plasmid-based luxCDABE bioreporter in Y. pestis 201, Y. pestis 201-pCD1+, Y. pestis 201-pMT1+, Y. pestis 201-pPCP1+, Y. pestis 201-pCRY+, Y. pestis 201-p and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis Pa36060 strains, and investigated their dissemination by bioluminescence imaging during primary septicemic plague in a mouse model. These strains mainly colonized the livers and spleens shortly after intravenous inoculation. Y. pestis 201-pMT1+ appeared to have a stronger ability to survive in the livers, spleens and blood, and to be more virulent than other plasmid-deficient strains. Y. pestis 201-pPCP1+ appeared to have a stronger ability to colonize lungs than other plasmid-deficient strains. Pa36060 has the strongest ability to colonize intestines and lungs. Y. pestis 201 has the strongest ability to survive in blood, and the strongest virulence. These results indicated that the plasmid pMT1 was an important determinant in the colonization of livers, spleens and blood, whereas the plasmid pPCP1 appeared to correlate with the colonization in lungs. The resistance to killing in mouse blood seemed to be the critical factor causing animal death.  相似文献   

20.
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