School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, United States of America.
School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, United States of America.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2018 Jan 30;12(1):e0006190. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0006190. eCollection 2018 Jan.
Leprosy is caused by the bacterial pathogens Mycobacterium leprae and Mycobacterium lepromatosis. Apart from humans, animals such as nine-banded armadillos in the Americas and red squirrels in the British Isles are naturally infected with M. leprae. Natural leprosy has also been reported in certain nonhuman primates, but it is not known whether these occurrences are due to incidental infections by human M. leprae strains or by M. leprae strains specific to nonhuman primates. In this study, complete M. leprae genomes from three naturally infected nonhuman primates (a chimpanzee from Sierra Leone, a sooty mangabey from West Africa, and a cynomolgus macaque from The Philippines) were sequenced. Phylogenetic analyses showed that the cynomolgus macaque M. leprae strain is most closely related to a human M. leprae strain from New Caledonia, whereas the chimpanzee and sooty mangabey M. leprae strains belong to a human M. leprae lineage commonly found in West Africa. Additionally, samples from ring-tailed lemurs from the Bezà Mahafaly Special Reserve, Madagascar, and chimpanzees from Ngogo, Kibale National Park, Uganda, were screened using quantitative PCR assays, to assess the prevalence of M. leprae in wild nonhuman primates. However, these samples did not show evidence of M. leprae infection. Overall, this study adds genomic data for nonhuman primate M. leprae strains to the existing M. leprae literature and finds that this pathogen can be transmitted from humans to nonhuman primates as well as between nonhuman primate species. While the prevalence of natural leprosy in nonhuman primates is likely low, nevertheless, future studies should continue to explore the prevalence of leprosy-causing pathogens in the wild.
麻风病由细菌病原体麻风分枝杆菌和麻风分枝杆菌引起。除人类外,美洲的九带犰狳和不列颠群岛的红松鼠等动物也自然感染麻风分枝杆菌。在某些非人类灵长类动物中也报告了自然发生的麻风病,但尚不清楚这些情况是由于人类麻风分枝杆菌株的偶然感染还是由于非人类灵长类动物特有的麻风分枝杆菌株所致。在这项研究中,对三种自然感染的非人类灵长类动物(来自塞拉利昂的黑猩猩、来自西非的黑卷尾猴和来自菲律宾的食蟹猕猴)的完整麻风分枝杆菌基因组进行了测序。系统发育分析表明,食蟹猕猴麻风分枝杆菌株与来自新喀里多尼亚的人类麻风分枝杆菌株最为密切相关,而黑猩猩和黑卷尾猴麻风分枝杆菌株属于在西非常见的人类麻风分枝杆菌谱系。此外,还使用定量 PCR 检测方法对来自马达加斯加贝扎马法利特别保护区的环尾狐猴和乌干达基巴莱国家公园恩戈戈的黑猩猩样本进行了筛查,以评估野生非人类灵长类动物中麻风分枝杆菌的流行情况。然而,这些样本并未显示出感染麻风分枝杆菌的证据。总体而言,本研究为非人类灵长类动物麻风分枝杆菌株提供了基因组数据,补充了现有的麻风分枝杆菌文献,并发现该病原体可从人类传播到非人类灵长类动物,以及在非人类灵长类动物物种之间传播。虽然野生非人类灵长类动物中自然发生的麻风病的流行率可能较低,但未来的研究仍应继续探索野生环境中引起麻风病的病原体的流行率。