Pérez-Grisales Luis Javier, Cruz-Moncada Mariana, Peláez-Sánchez Ronald, Díaz-Nieto Juan Fernando
Departamento de Ciencias Biológicas, Escuela de Ciencias, Grupo de investigación en Biodiversidad Evolución y Conservación (BEC), Universidad EAFIT, Medellín, Colombia.
Grupo de Investigación en Ciencias Básicas, Escuela de Graduados, Universidad CES, Medellín, Colombia.
Zoonoses Public Health. 2021 Feb;68(1):38-53. doi: 10.1111/zph.12787. Epub 2020 Nov 29.
Toxoplasma gondii is one of the most prevalent zoonotic protozoan parasites among warm-blooded animal populations (humans included) around the world, causing multiple clinic manifestations including death in the most severe cases of infection. Due to the versatile life cycle of T. gondii and its diversity of potential hosts, there is a common perception that natural areas and wildlife are highly prevalent reservoirs for the parasite; however, information and reports of the parasite on wildlife populations in Colombia are scarce. Using PRC-based detection analyses of the B1 gene, we evaluated the presence of T. gondii in 49 native small mammal species (10% of the mammal species of Colombia) from 4 different undisturbed natural habitats. Additionally, to understand the ecogeographical distribution of the parasite in Colombia, we developed a literature search of infection reports including information on the host species, density of records and occurrence patterns (using landcover and ecoregions) in natural, rural and urban areas. Our literature review showed a total of 8,103 reports of T. gondii for Colombia of which 86% were related to humans, and 14% to non-human mammals and other categories, with just a single report associated to wildlife; additionally, 82% of all reports were associated to urban areas whereas only 18% to rural sites. Based on the negative results for the presence of T. gondii in our PCR-based analyses and our literature search, we suggest that T. gondii has a synanthropic distribution in Colombia occurring in ecoregions as variable as the xeric scrubs in the northern lowlands and humid montane Andean forests, also we show a lack of information on the parasite relationship with wildlife, a concerning fact given that zoonoses are the leading mechanism for the emergence of infectious diseases.
刚地弓形虫是世界范围内温血动物种群(包括人类)中最普遍的人畜共患原生动物寄生虫之一,在最严重的感染病例中会导致多种临床症状,甚至死亡。由于刚地弓形虫具有多样的生命周期及其潜在宿主的多样性,人们普遍认为自然区域和野生动物是该寄生虫的高流行宿主;然而,关于哥伦比亚野生动物种群中该寄生虫的信息和报告却很稀少。我们通过基于PCR的B1基因检测分析,评估了来自4个不同未受干扰自然栖息地的49种本土小型哺乳动物物种(占哥伦比亚哺乳动物物种的10%)中刚地弓形虫的存在情况。此外,为了解该寄生虫在哥伦比亚的生态地理分布,我们对感染报告进行了文献检索,包括宿主物种信息、记录密度以及自然、农村和城市地区的发生模式(使用土地覆盖和生态区域)。我们的文献综述显示,哥伦比亚共有8103份刚地弓形虫报告,其中86%与人类有关,14%与非人类哺乳动物和其他类别有关,仅有一份报告与野生动物相关;此外,所有报告的82%与城市地区有关,而与农村地区相关的仅占18%。基于我们基于PCR分析和文献检索中刚地弓形虫存在的阴性结果,我们认为刚地弓形虫在哥伦比亚具有共栖分布,出现在生态区域中,范围从北部低地的旱生灌丛到潮湿的安第斯山地森林不等,同时我们也表明缺乏关于该寄生虫与野生动物关系的信息,鉴于人畜共患病是传染病出现的主要机制,这是一个令人担忧的事实。