Ghai Ria R, Chapman Colin A, Omeja Patrick A, Davies T Jonathan, Goldberg Tony L
Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Department of Anthropology and McGill School of Environment, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and Wildlife Conservation Society, Bronx, New York, New York, United States of America ; Makerere University Biological Field Station, Fort Portal, Uganda.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2014 Jan 9;8(1):e2641. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002641. eCollection 2014.
Soil-transmitted helminths (STHs) are a major health concern in tropical and sub-tropical countries. Oesophagostomum infection is considered endemic to West Africa but has also been identified in Uganda, East Africa, among primates (including humans). However, the taxonomy and ecology of Oesophagostomum in Uganda have not been studied, except for in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), which are infected by both O. bifurcum and O. stephanostomum.
We studied Oesophagostomum in Uganda in a community of non-human primates that live in close proximity to humans. Prevalence estimates based on microscopy were lower than those based on polymerase chain reaction (PCR), indicating greater sensitivity of PCR. Prevalence varied among host species, with humans and red colobus (Procolobus rufomitratus) infected at lowest prevalence (25% and 41% by PCR, respectively), and chimpanzees, olive baboons (Papio anubis), and l'hoest monkeys (Cercopithecus lhoesti) infected at highest prevalence (100% by PCR in all three species). Phylogenetic regression showed that primates travelling further and in smaller groups are at greatest risk of infection. Molecular phylogenetic analyses revealed three cryptic clades of Oesophagostomum that were not distinguishable based on morphological characteristics of their eggs. Of these, the clade with the greatest host range had not previously been described genetically. This novel clade infects humans, as well as five other species of primates.
Multiple cryptic forms of Oesophagostomum circulate in the people and primates of western Uganda, and parasite clades differ in host range and cross-species transmission potential. Our results expand knowledge about human Oesophagostomum infection beyond the West African countries of Togo and Ghana, where the parasite is a known public health concern. Oesophagostomum infection in humans may be common throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, and the transmission of this neglected STH among primates, including zoonotic transmission, may vary among host communities depending on their location and ecology.
土壤传播的蠕虫(STHs)是热带和亚热带国家主要的健康问题。结节虫感染在西非被认为是地方性疾病,但在东非的乌干达,在灵长类动物(包括人类)中也有发现。然而,除了感染了分支结节虫和斯蒂芬氏结节虫的黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)外,乌干达结节虫的分类学和生态学尚未得到研究。
我们在乌干达一个与人类生活密切相关的非人类灵长类动物群落中研究了结节虫。基于显微镜检查的患病率估计低于基于聚合酶链反应(PCR)的估计,表明PCR具有更高的敏感性。患病率因宿主物种而异,人类和红疣猴(Procolobus rufomitratus)的感染率最低(PCR检测分别为25%和41%),而黑猩猩、东非狒狒(Papio anubis)和洛氏猴(Cercopithecus lhoesti)的感染率最高(所有三个物种的PCR检测均为100%)。系统发育回归表明,活动范围更广且群体较小的灵长类动物感染风险最大。分子系统发育分析揭示了结节虫的三个隐性进化枝,根据其虫卵的形态特征无法区分。其中,宿主范围最广的进化枝以前在基因上尚未被描述。这个新的进化枝感染人类以及其他五种灵长类动物。
多种隐性形式的结节虫在乌干达西部的人类和灵长类动物中传播,寄生虫进化枝在宿主范围和跨物种传播潜力方面存在差异。我们的研究结果扩展了对人类结节虫感染的认识,超出了已知该寄生虫为公共卫生问题的西非国家多哥和加纳。人类结节虫感染在撒哈拉以南非洲可能很普遍,这种被忽视的土壤传播蠕虫在灵长类动物中的传播,包括人畜共患病传播,可能因宿主群落的位置和生态不同而有所差异。