Landeryou Toby, Maddren Rosie, Hearn Jack, Belachew Mahlet, Gomez Santiago Rayment, Liyew Ewnetu Firdawek, Forbes Kathryn, Mengistu Birhan, Lawton Scott P, Eze Jude, Tasew Geremew, Angulo Ufaysa, Anderson Roy
Centre for Epidemiology and Planetary Health, School of Veterinary Medicine, Scotland's Rural College, Inverness, IV23JX, Scotland, UK.
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, School of Public Health Building, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Nat Commun. 2025 May 9;16(1):4321. doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-59316-x.
Control and elimination of the parasite Ascaris lumbricoides relies on mass drug administration (MDA) using a limited number of anti-helminthics. Whilst these programs have reduced the infection intensity and prevalence within many endemic regions, patterns of transmission remain poorly understood. Reinfection commonly occurs following cessation of treatment due to the absence of acquired immunity post infection. Here, we utilise genomic data to understand parasite transmission within and between households in a community and the genomic impact of repeated MDA. We sequenced 54 whole-genomes from Ascaris worms obtained from individuals in a longitudinal cohort epidemiological study of transmission and drug treatment extending over 6 years. We found that fine-scale population structure exists in spatially distinct clusters of infected individuals with reinfection occurring within or between geographically close households. This observation helps inform the policy for future control in low prevalence settings suggesting more targeted treatment of infection hotspots. We found evidence of positive selection acting on members of gene families previously implicated in reduced drug efficacy but detected no impactful variants. As efforts to eliminate A. lumbricoides intensify, our study provides a foundation for genomic surveillance to help identify both who infects whom and the impact of repeated drug treatment.
蛔虫的控制与消除依赖于使用有限数量抗蠕虫药物的群体药物治疗(MDA)。虽然这些项目已经降低了许多流行地区的感染强度和流行率,但传播模式仍知之甚少。由于感染后缺乏获得性免疫,治疗停止后通常会再次感染。在这里,我们利用基因组数据来了解社区内家庭内部和家庭之间的寄生虫传播以及重复群体药物治疗的基因组影响。我们对在一项为期6年的关于传播和药物治疗的纵向队列流行病学研究中从个体身上获得的蛔虫进行了54个全基因组测序。我们发现,在空间上不同的受感染个体集群中存在精细尺度的种群结构,再次感染发生在地理上相邻的家庭内部或之间。这一观察结果有助于为低流行率地区未来的控制政策提供信息,表明对感染热点进行更有针对性的治疗。我们发现了正选择作用于先前与药物疗效降低有关的基因家族成员的证据,但未检测到有影响的变异。随着消除蛔虫的努力加强,我们的研究为基因组监测提供了基础,以帮助确定谁感染了谁以及重复药物治疗的影响。