Stoffolano John G
Stockbridge School of Agriculture, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003, USA.
Insects. 2022 Aug 27;13(9):776. doi: 10.3390/insects13090776.
An attempt has been made to provide a broad review of synanthropic flies and, not just a survey of their involvement in human pathogen transmission. It also emphasizes that the crop organ of calliphorids, sarcophagids, and muscids was an evolutionary development and has served and assisted non-blood feeding flies in obtaining food, as well as pathogens, prior to the origin of humans. Insects are believed to be present on earth about 400 million years ago (MYA). Thus, prior to the origin of primates, there was adequate time for these flies to become associated with various animals and to serve as important transmitters of pathogens associated with them prior to the advent of early hominids and modern humans. Through the process of fly crop regurgitation, numerous pathogens are still readily being made available to primates and other animals. Several studies using invertebrate-derived DNA = iDNA meta-techniques have been able to identify, not only the source the fly had fed on, but also if it had fed on their feces or the animal's body fluids. Since these flies are known to feed on both vertebrate fluids (i.e., from wounds, saliva, mucus, or tears), as well as those of other animals, and their feces, identification of the reservoir host, amplification hosts, and associated pathogens is essential in identifying emerging infectious diseases. New molecular tools, along with a focus on the crop, and what is in it, should provide a better understanding and development of whether these flies are involved in emerging infectious diseases. If so, epidemiological models in the future might be better at predicting future epidemics or pandemics.
本文试图对伴人蝇进行广泛综述,而不仅仅是调查它们在人类病原体传播中的作用。它还强调,丽蝇科、麻蝇科和蝇科昆虫的嗉囊器官是一种进化发展,在人类出现之前,它就为非吸血性苍蝇获取食物和病原体提供了帮助。昆虫被认为大约在4亿年前就出现在地球上。因此,在灵长类动物出现之前,这些苍蝇有足够的时间与各种动物建立联系,并在早期原始人和现代人类出现之前,作为与它们相关的病原体的重要传播者。通过苍蝇嗉囊反流的过程,许多病原体仍然很容易传播给灵长类动物和其他动物。几项使用无脊椎动物来源DNA(iDNA)元技术的研究不仅能够确定苍蝇的取食来源,还能确定它是否取食了它们的粪便或动物的体液。由于已知这些苍蝇既取食脊椎动物的体液(即伤口、唾液、黏液或眼泪中的体液),也取食其他动物的体液及其粪便,因此确定储存宿主、扩增宿主和相关病原体对于识别新出现的传染病至关重要。新的分子工具,以及对嗉囊及其内容物的关注,应该能更好地理解和确定这些苍蝇是否与新出现的传染病有关。如果是这样,未来的流行病学模型可能会更擅长预测未来的流行病或大流行病。