Institut de Recherche Pour Le Développement (IRD), UMI 233-TransVIHMI-INSERM U1175-University of Montpellier, Montpellier, France.
Institute of Vertebrate Biology, Czech Academy of Sciences, Květná 8, 603 65, Brno, Czech Republic.
Parasit Vectors. 2021 Jul 5;14(1):354. doi: 10.1186/s13071-021-04855-7.
Zoonotic diseases are a serious threat to both public health and animal conservation. Most non-human primates (NHP) are facing the threat of forest loss and fragmentation and are increasingly living in closer spatial proximity to humans. Humans are infected with soil-transmitted helminths (STH) at a high prevalence, and bidirectional infection with NHP has been observed. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence, genetic diversity, distribution and presence of co-infections of STH in free-ranging gorillas, chimpanzees and other NHP species, and to determine the potential role of these NHP as reservoir hosts contributing to the environmental sustenance of zoonotic nematode infections in forested areas of Cameroon and Gabon.
A total of 315 faecal samples from six species of NHPs were analysed. We performed PCR amplification, sequencing and maximum likelihood analysis of DNA fragments of the internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) nuclear ribosomal DNA to detect the presence and determine the genetic diversity of Oesophagostomum spp., Necator spp. and Trichuris spp., and of targeted DNA fragments of the internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS1) to detect the presence of Ascaris spp.
Necator spp. infections were most common in gorillas (35 of 65 individuals), but also present in chimpanzees (100 of 222 individuals) and in one of four samples from greater spot-nosed monkeys. These clustered with previously described type II and III Necator spp. Gorillas were also the most infected NHP with Oesophagostomum (51/65 individuals), followed by chimpanzees (157/222 individuals), mandrills (8/12 samples) and mangabeys (7/12 samples), with O. stephanostomum being the most prevalent species. Oesophagostomum bifurcum was detected in chimpanzees and a red-capped mangabey, and a non-classified Oesophagostomum species was detected in a mandrill and a red-capped mangabey. In addition, Ternidens deminutus was detected in samples from one chimpanzee and three greater spot-nosed monkeys. A significant relative overabundance of co-infections with Necator and Oesophagostomum was observed in chimpanzees and gorillas. Trichuris sp. was detected at low prevalence in a gorilla, a chimpanzee and a greater spot-nosed monkey. No Ascaris was observed in any of the samples analysed.
Our results on STH prevalence and genetic diversity in NHP from Cameroon and Gabon corroborate those obtained from other wild NHP populations in other African countries. Future research should focus on better identifying, at a molecular level, the species of Necator and Oesophagostomum infecting NHP and determining how human populations may be affected by increased proximity resulting from encroachment into sylvatic STH reservoir habitats.
人畜共患病对公共卫生和动物保护构成严重威胁。大多数非人类灵长类动物(NHP)面临着森林丧失和破碎化的威胁,并且越来越多地生活在与人类更接近的空间中。人类感染土壤传播的蠕虫(STH)的患病率很高,并且观察到与 NHP 的双向感染。本研究旨在确定自由放养的大猩猩、黑猩猩和其他 NHP 物种中 STH 的流行率、遗传多样性、分布和合并感染情况,并确定这些 NHP 作为水库宿主的潜在作用,这些宿主有助于维持喀麦隆和加蓬森林地区的人畜共患线虫感染。
分析了来自六种 NHP 的 315 份粪便样本。我们对内部转录间隔区 2(ITS2)核核糖体 DNA 的 DNA 片段进行了 PCR 扩增、测序和最大似然分析,以检测 Oesophagostomum spp.、Necator spp. 和 Trichuris spp. 的存在和遗传多样性,并检测了内部转录间隔区 1(ITS1)的靶向 DNA 片段以检测 Ascaris spp. 的存在。
Necator spp. 在大猩猩(65 只中有 35 只)中最常见,但在黑猩猩(222 只中有 100 只)和四只大斑点鼻猴中有一只中也存在。这些与先前描述的 II 型和 III 型 Necator spp. 聚集在一起。大猩猩也是感染 Oesophagostomum(65 只中有 51 只)的最受感染的 NHP,其次是黑猩猩(222 只中有 157 只)、山魈(12 只中有 8 只)和白眉猴(12 只中有 7 只),其中最常见的物种是 O. stephanostomum。在黑猩猩和红帽长尾猴中检测到 Oesophagostomum bifurcum,在山魈和红帽长尾猴中检测到未分类的 Oesophagostomum 物种。此外,在一只黑猩猩和三只大斑点鼻猴的样本中检测到 Ternidens deminutus。在黑猩猩和大猩猩中观察到 Necator 和 Oesophagostomum 的合并感染相对过度丰富。在一只大猩猩、一只黑猩猩和一只大斑点鼻猴中,Trichuris sp. 的患病率较低。在分析的任何样本中均未观察到 Ascaris。
我们在喀麦隆和加蓬的 NHP 中关于 STH 流行率和遗传多样性的研究结果与在其他非洲国家的其他野生 NHP 群体中获得的结果一致。未来的研究应侧重于在分子水平上更好地识别感染 NHP 的 Necator 和 Oesophagostomum 物种,并确定人类种群如何受到侵入森林 STH 水库栖息地导致的接近度增加的影响。