首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Mycobacterium ulcerans Persistence at a Village Water Source of Buruli Ulcer Patients
Authors:Martin W. Bratschi  Marie-Thérèse Ruf  Arianna Andreoli  Jacques C. Minyem  Sarah Kerber  Fidèle G. Wantong  James Pritchard  Victoria Chakwera  Christian Beuret  Matthias Wittwer  Djeunga Noumen  Nadia Schürch  Alphonse Um Book  Gerd Pluschke
Affiliation:1. Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, Switzerland.; 2. University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.; 3. FAIRMED Africa Regional Office, Yaoundé, Cameroon.; 4. Bankim District Hospital, Bankim, Cameroon.; 5. Labor Spiez, Spiez, Switzerland.; Fondation Raoul Follereau, France,
Abstract:Buruli ulcer (BU), a neglected tropical disease of the skin and subcutaneous tissue, is caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans and is the third most common mycobacterial disease after tuberculosis and leprosy. While there is a strong association of the occurrence of the disease with stagnant or slow flowing water bodies, the exact mode of transmission of BU is not clear. M. ulcerans has emerged from the environmental fish pathogen M. marinum by acquisition of a virulence plasmid encoding the enzymes required for the production of the cytotoxic macrolide toxin mycolactone, which is a key factor in the pathogenesis of BU. Comparative genomic studies have further shown extensive pseudogene formation and downsizing of the M. ulcerans genome, indicative for an adaptation to a more stable ecological niche. This has raised the question whether this pathogen is still present in water-associated environmental reservoirs. Here we show persistence of M. ulcerans specific DNA sequences over a period of more than two years at a water contact location of BU patients in an endemic village of Cameroon. At defined positions in a shallow water hole used by the villagers for washing and bathing, detritus remained consistently positive for M. ulcerans DNA. The observed mean real-time PCR Ct difference of 1.45 between the insertion sequences IS2606 and IS2404 indicated that lineage 3 M. ulcerans, which cause human disease, persisted in this environment after successful treatment of all local patients. Underwater decaying organic matter may therefore represent a reservoir of M. ulcerans for direct infection of skin lesions or vector-associated transmission.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号