Kuznetsova Alsu, McKenzie Debbie, Banser Pamela, Siddique Tariq, Aiken Judd M
Prion. 2014 Jan-Feb;8(1):92-9. doi: 10.4161/pri.28467.
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a horizontally transmissible prion disease of free ranging deer, elk and moose. Recent experimental transmission studies indicate caribou are also susceptible to the disease. CWD is present in southeast Alberta and southern Saskatchewan. This CWD-endemic region is expanding, threatening Manitoba and areas of northern Alberta and Saskatchewan, home to caribou. Soil can serve as a stable reservoir for infectious prion proteins; prions bound to soil particles remain infectious in the soils for many years. Soils of western Canada are very diverse and the ability of CWD prions to bind different soils and the impact of this interaction on infectivity is not known. In general, clay-rich soils may bind prions avidly and enhance their infectivity comparable to pure clay mineral montmorillonite. Organic components of soils are also diverse and not well characterized, yet can impact prion-soil interaction. Other important contributing factors include soil pH, composition of soil solution and amount of metals (metal oxides). In this review, properties of soils of the CWD-endemic region in western Canada with its surrounding terrestrial environment are described and used to predict bioavailability and, thus, potential spread of CWD. The major soils in the CWD-endemic region of Alberta and Saskatchewan are Chernozems, present in 60% of the total area; they are generally similar in texture, clay mineralogy and soil organic matter content, and can be characterized as clay loamy, montmorillonite (smectite) soils with 6-10% organic carbon. The greatest risk of CWD spread in western Canada relates to clay loamy, montmorillonite soils with humus horizon. Such soils are predominant in the southern region of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, but are less common in northern regions of the provinces where quartz-illite sandy soils with low amount of humus prevail.
慢性消耗病(CWD)是一种可在自由放养的鹿、麋鹿和驼鹿之间水平传播的朊病毒病。最近的实验性传播研究表明,驯鹿也易感染该病。CWD存在于艾伯塔省东南部和萨斯喀彻温省南部。这个CWD流行地区正在扩大,威胁到马尼托巴省以及驯鹿栖息地所在的艾伯塔省北部和萨斯喀彻温省部分地区。土壤可作为传染性朊病毒蛋白的稳定储存库;与土壤颗粒结合的朊病毒在土壤中多年仍具传染性。加拿大西部的土壤种类繁多,CWD朊病毒与不同土壤结合的能力以及这种相互作用对传染性的影响尚不清楚。一般来说,富含粘土的土壤可能会 avidly 结合朊病毒,并增强其传染性,堪比纯粘土矿物蒙脱石。土壤的有机成分也多种多样且特征不明,但会影响朊病毒与土壤的相互作用。其他重要因素包括土壤pH值、土壤溶液成分和金属(金属氧化物)含量。在本综述中,描述了加拿大西部CWD流行地区土壤及其周边陆地环境的特性,并用于预测CWD的生物可利用性以及潜在传播情况。艾伯塔省和萨斯喀彻温省CWD流行地区的主要土壤是黑钙土,占总面积的60%;它们在质地、粘土矿物学和土壤有机质含量方面通常相似,可被描述为含有6 - 10%有机碳的粘壤土、蒙脱石(绿土)土壤。加拿大西部CWD传播的最大风险与具有腐殖质层的粘壤土、蒙脱石土壤有关。这类土壤在艾伯塔省、萨斯喀彻温省和马尼托巴省南部地区占主导地位,但在这些省份北部地区较少见,那里以腐殖质含量低的石英伊利石砂土为主。