Eisen Rebecca J, Bearden Scott W, Wilder Aryn P, Montenieri John A, Antolin Michael F, Gage Kenneth L
Bacterial Diseases Branch, Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, PO Box 2087, Fort Collins, CO 80522, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Oct 17;103(42):15380-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0606831103. Epub 2006 Oct 10.
Plague is a highly virulent disease believed to have killed millions during three historic human pandemics. Worldwide, it remains a threat to humans and is a potential agent of bioterrorism. Dissemination of Yersinia pestis, the etiological agent of plague, by blocked fleas has been the accepted paradigm for flea-borne transmission. However, this mechanism, which requires a lengthy extrinsic incubation period before a short infectious window often followed by death of the flea, cannot sufficiently explain the rapid rate of spread that typifies plague epidemics and epizootics. Inconsistencies between the expected rate of spread by blocked rat fleas and that observed during the Black Death has even caused speculation that plague was not the cause of this medieval pandemic. We used the primary vector to humans in North America, Oropsylla montana, which rarely becomes blocked, as a model for studying alternative flea-borne transmission mechanisms. Our data revealed that, in contrast to the classical blocked flea model, O. montana is immediately infectious, transmits efficiently for at least 4 d postinfection (early phase) and may remain infectious for a long time because the fleas do not suffer block-induced mortality. These factors match the criteria required to drive plague epizootics as defined by recently published mathematical models. The scenario of efficient early-phase transmission by unblocked fleas described in our study calls for a paradigm shift in concepts of how Y. pestis is transmitted during rapidly spreading epizootics and epidemics, including, perhaps, the Black Death.
鼠疫是一种高致病性疾病,据信在人类历史上的三次大流行中导致了数百万人死亡。在全球范围内,它仍然对人类构成威胁,并且是生物恐怖主义的潜在媒介。鼠疫杆菌(鼠疫的病原体)通过堵塞的跳蚤传播一直是跳蚤传播的公认模式。然而,这种机制在短暂的感染窗口期之前需要很长的外在潜伏期,之后跳蚤往往会死亡,无法充分解释鼠疫流行和 epizootics 的典型快速传播速度。堵塞的鼠蚤预期传播速度与黑死病期间观察到的速度之间的不一致甚至引发了人们对鼠疫不是这场中世纪大流行原因的猜测。我们使用北美人类的主要传播媒介蒙塔那山蚤(Oropsylla montana)作为研究替代跳蚤传播机制的模型,这种跳蚤很少被堵塞。我们的数据显示,与经典的堵塞跳蚤模型不同,蒙塔那山蚤在感染后立即具有传染性,在感染后至少 4 天内高效传播(早期阶段),并且可能长时间保持传染性,因为跳蚤不会因堵塞导致死亡。这些因素符合最近发表的数学模型所定义的推动鼠疫 epizootics 的标准。我们研究中描述的未堵塞跳蚤高效早期传播的情况要求在鼠疫杆菌在快速传播的 epizootics 和流行病(包括可能的黑死病)期间传播方式的概念上进行范式转变。