Singh Nitya, Thystrup Cecilie A N, Hassen Bahar Mummed, Bhandari Menuka, Rajashekara Gireesh, Hald Tine M, Manary Mark J, McKune Sarah L, Hassen Jemal Yusuf, Smith Helen L, Marshall Jonathan C, French Nigel P, Havelaar Arie H
Department of Animal Sciences, Global Food Systems Institute, Emerging Pathogens Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark, Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark.
Gut Pathog. 2025 May 3;17(1):26. doi: 10.1186/s13099-025-00691-7.
Campylobacter jejuni and C. coli are the most common causes of bacterial enteritis worldwide whereas symptomatic and asymptomatic infections are associated with stunting in children in low- and middle-income countries. Little is known about their sources and transmission pathways in low- and middle-income countries, and particularly for infants and young children. We assessed the genomic diversity of C. jejuni in Eastern Ethiopia to determine the attribution of infections in infants under 1 year of age to livestock (chickens, cattle, goats and sheep) and other humans (siblings, mothers).
Among 287 C. jejuni isolates, 48 seven-gene sequence types (STs), including 11 previously unreported STs were identified. Within an ST, the core genome STs of multiple isolates differed in fewer than five alleles. Many of these isolates do not belong to the most common STs reported in high-resource settings, and of the six most common global STs, only ST50 was found in our study area. Isolates from the same infant sample were closely related, while those from consecutive infant samples often displayed different STs, suggesting rapid clearance and new infection. Four different attribution models using different genomic profiling methods, assumptions and estimation methods predicted that chickens are the primary reservoir for infant infections. Infections from chickens are transmitted with or without other humans (mothers, siblings) as intermediate sources. Model predictions differed in terms of the relative importance of cattle versus small ruminants as additional sources.
The transmission pathways of C. jejuni in our study area are highly complex and interdependent. While chickens are the most important reservoir of C. jejuni, ruminant reservoirs also contribute to the infections. The currently nonculturable species Candidatus C. infans is also highly prevalent in infants and is likely anthroponotic. Efforts to reduce the colonization of infants with Campylobacter and ultimately stunting in low-resource settings are best aimed at protecting proximate sources such as caretakers' hands, food and indoor soil through tight integration of the currently siloed domains of nutrition, food safety and water, sanitation and hygiene.
空肠弯曲菌和结肠弯曲菌是全球细菌性肠炎最常见的病因,而在低收入和中等收入国家,有症状和无症状感染与儿童发育迟缓有关。在低收入和中等收入国家,人们对其来源和传播途径知之甚少,尤其是对婴幼儿而言。我们评估了埃塞俄比亚东部空肠弯曲菌的基因组多样性,以确定1岁以下婴儿感染源是家畜(鸡、牛、山羊和绵羊)还是其他人类(兄弟姐妹、母亲)。
在287株空肠弯曲菌分离株中,鉴定出48种七基因序列类型(STs),其中包括11种以前未报告的STs。在一个ST内,多个分离株的核心基因组STs在少于五个等位基因上存在差异。这些分离株中的许多不属于高资源环境中报告的最常见STs,在我们的研究区域中,六种最常见的全球STs中仅发现了ST50。来自同一婴儿样本的分离株密切相关,而来自连续婴儿样本的分离株通常显示不同的STs,这表明感染能快速清除并出现新感染。使用不同基因组分析方法、假设和估计方法的四种不同归因模型预测,鸡是婴儿感染的主要宿主。鸡的感染传播时有无其他人类(母亲、兄弟姐妹)作为中间源。在牛和小反刍动物作为额外感染源的相对重要性方面,模型预测有所不同。
我们研究区域中空肠弯曲菌的传播途径高度复杂且相互依存。虽然鸡是空肠弯曲菌最重要的宿主,但反刍动物宿主也会导致感染。目前无法培养的婴儿弯曲菌候选种在婴儿中也非常普遍,且可能是人畜共患病。在资源匮乏地区,减少婴儿弯曲菌定植并最终减少发育迟缓的努力,最好通过紧密整合目前相互孤立的营养、食品安全以及水、环境卫生和个人卫生等领域,来保护如看护者的手、食物和室内土壤等直接感染源。