Rachlin Audrey, Shilton Cathy, Webb Jessica R, Mayo Mark, Kaestli Mirjam, Kleinecke Mariana, Rigas Vanessa, Benedict Suresh, Gurry Ian, Currie Bart J
Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Casuarina NT, 0811, Australia.
Department of Primary Industry and Resources, Berrimah Veterinary Laboratory, Berrimah Farm, Makagon Road, Berrimah, Northern Territory, 0828, Australia.
BMC Vet Res. 2019 Dec 19;15(1):458. doi: 10.1186/s12917-019-2198-9.
Melioidosis is a tropical infectious disease which is being increasingly recognised throughout the globe. Infection occurs in humans and animals, typically through direct exposure to soil or water containing the environmental bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei. Case clusters of melioidosis have been described in humans following severe weather events and in exotic animals imported into melioidosis endemic zones. Direct transmission of B. pseudomallei between animals and/or humans has been documented but is considered extremely rare. Between March 2015 and October 2016 eight fatal cases of melioidosis were reported in slender-tailed meerkats (Suricata suricatta) on display at a Wildlife Park in Northern Australia. To further investigate the melioidosis case cluster we sampled the meerkat enclosure and adjacent park areas and performed whole-genome sequencing (WGS) on all culture-positive B. pseudomallei environmental and clinical isolates.
WGS confirmed that the fatalities were caused by two different B. pseudomallei sequence types (STs) but that seven of the meerkat isolates were highly similar on the whole-genome level. Used concurrently with detailed pathology data, our results demonstrate that the seven cases originated from a single original source, but routes of infection varied amongst meerkats belonging to the clonal outbreak cluster. Moreover, in some instances direct transmission may have transpired through wounds inflicted while fighting.
Collectively, this study supports the use of high-resolution WGS to enhance epidemiological investigations into transmission modalities and pathogenesis of melioidosis, especially in the instance of a possible clonal outbreak scenario in exotic zoological collections. Such findings from an animal outbreak have important One Health implications.
类鼻疽是一种热带传染病,在全球范围内日益受到关注。人类和动物均可感染,通常是通过直接接触含有环境细菌类鼻疽伯克霍尔德菌的土壤或水。在恶劣天气事件后,以及将外来动物引入类鼻疽流行区后,已报告出现人类类鼻疽病例聚集情况。已记录到类鼻疽伯克霍尔德菌在动物和/或人类之间的直接传播,但被认为极为罕见。2015年3月至2016年10月期间,澳大利亚北部一家野生动物园展出的细尾獴(Suricata suricatta)中报告了8例类鼻疽死亡病例。为了进一步调查类鼻疽病例聚集情况,我们对细尾獴围栏及相邻的公园区域进行了采样,并对所有培养阳性的类鼻疽伯克霍尔德菌环境和临床分离株进行了全基因组测序(WGS)。
WGS证实,死亡是由两种不同的类鼻疽伯克霍尔德菌序列类型(STs)引起的,但7株细尾獴分离株在全基因组水平上高度相似。结合详细的病理学数据,我们的结果表明,这7例病例源自单一原始来源,但感染途径在属于克隆暴发集群的细尾獴中有所不同。此外,在某些情况下,直接传播可能是通过打斗时造成的伤口发生的。
总体而言,本研究支持使用高分辨率WGS来加强对类鼻疽传播方式和发病机制的流行病学调查,特别是在异国动物收藏中可能出现克隆暴发的情况下。动物暴发的此类发现具有重要的“同一健康”意义。