Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana 59717, USA.
Baker Institute for Animal Health, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA.
Nat Rev Microbiol. 2017 Aug;15(8):502-510. doi: 10.1038/nrmicro.2017.45. Epub 2017 May 30.
Zoonotic spillover, which is the transmission of a pathogen from a vertebrate animal to a human, presents a global public health burden but is a poorly understood phenomenon. Zoonotic spillover requires several factors to align, including the ecological, epidemiological and behavioural determinants of pathogen exposure, and the within-human factors that affect susceptibility to infection. In this Opinion article, we propose a synthetic framework for animal-to-human transmission that integrates the relevant mechanisms. This framework reveals that all zoonotic pathogens must overcome a hierarchical series of barriers to cause spillover infections in humans. Understanding how these barriers are functionally and quantitatively linked, and how they interact in space and time, will substantially improve our ability to predict or prevent spillover events. This work provides a foundation for transdisciplinary investigation of spillover and synthetic theory on zoonotic transmission.
人畜共患病溢出,即病原体从脊椎动物传播给人类,对全球公共卫生造成负担,但这一现象还未被充分理解。人畜共患病溢出需要多个因素相互配合,包括病原体暴露的生态、流行病学和行为决定因素,以及影响易感性的人体内因素。在这篇观点文章中,我们提出了一个综合框架,用于整合相关机制的动物到人类的传播。该框架表明,所有的人畜共患病病原体都必须克服一系列层次的障碍才能在人类中引起溢出感染。理解这些障碍在功能和数量上是如何联系的,以及它们如何在空间和时间上相互作用,将极大地提高我们预测或预防溢出事件的能力。这项工作为溢出的跨学科研究和人畜共患病传播的综合理论提供了基础。