Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory (VIDRL), North Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Department of Zoology, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2014 Jan 30;8(1):e2668. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002668. eCollection 2014.
The last 20 years has seen a significant series of outbreaks of Buruli/Bairnsdale Ulcer (BU), caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans, in temperate south-eastern Australia (state of Victoria). Here, the prevailing view of M. ulcerans as an aquatic pathogen has been questioned by recent research identifying native wildlife as potential terrestrial reservoirs of infection; specifically, tree-dwelling common ringtail and brushtail possums. In that previous work, sampling of environmental possum faeces detected a high prevalence of M. ulcerans DNA in established endemic areas for human BU on the Bellarine Peninsula, compared with non-endemic areas. Here, we report research from an emergent BU focus recently identified on the Mornington Peninsula, confirming associations between human BU and the presence of the aetiological agent in possum faeces, detected by real-time PCR targeting M. ulcerans IS2404, IS2606 and KR. Mycobacterium ulcerans DNA was detected in 20/216 (9.3%) ground collected ringtail possum faecal samples and 4/6 (66.6%) brushtail possum faecal samples. The distribution of the PCR positive possum faecal samples and human BU cases was highly focal: there was a significant non-random cluster of 16 M. ulcerans positive possum faecal sample points detected by spatial scan statistics (P<0.0001) within a circle of radius 0.42 km, within which were located the addresses of 6/12 human cases reported from the area to date; moreover, the highest sample PCR signal strength (equivalent to ≥10(6) organisms per gram of faeces) was found in a sample point located within this cluster radius. Corresponding faecal samples collected from closely adjacent BU-free areas were predominantly negative. Possums may be useful sentinels to predict endemic spread of human BU in Victoria, for public health planning. Further research is needed to establish whether spatial associations represent evidence of direct or indirect transmission between possums and humans, and the mechanism by which this may occur.
过去 20 年来,澳大利亚东南部(维多利亚州)温带地区发生了一系列由溃疡分枝杆菌引起的伯里/贝尔纳尔迪尔溃疡(BU)暴发。在这里,最近的研究质疑了溃疡分枝杆菌作为水生病原体的观点,该研究发现,本地野生动物可能是感染的潜在陆地储主;具体来说,是树栖的普通环尾袋貂和帚尾袋貂。在之前的工作中,对环境袋貂粪便的采样检测到,在伯拉林半岛的人类 BU 地方性流行地区,与非地方性流行地区相比,M. ulcerans DNA 的检出率很高。在这里,我们报告了最近在莫宁顿半岛新发现的一个正在出现的 BU 焦点的研究结果,证实了人类 BU 与致病因子在袋貂粪便中的存在之间存在关联,这是通过针对 M. ulcerans IS2404、IS2606 和 KR 的实时 PCR 检测到的。在 216 份采集的环尾袋貂粪便样本中,有 20 份(9.3%)和 6 份(66.6%)采集的帚尾袋貂粪便样本中检测到 M. ulcerans DNA。PCR 阳性袋貂粪便样本和人类 BU 病例的分布高度集中:通过空间扫描统计,在一个半径为 0.42 公里的圆圈内,检测到 16 个 M. ulcerans 阳性袋貂粪便样本点的显著非随机聚集(P<0.0001),到目前为止,该地区报告的 12 例人类病例中有 6 例位于该区域内;此外,在该聚类半径内,一个样本点的样本 PCR 信号强度最高(相当于每克粪便中≥10(6)个生物体)。从紧邻的 BU 无病地区采集的粪便样本主要为阴性。袋貂可能是预测维多利亚州人类 BU 地方性流行的有用哨兵,用于公共卫生规划。需要进一步研究来确定空间关联是否代表袋貂与人类之间直接或间接传播的证据,以及这种传播可能发生的机制。