Understanding the transmission of bacterial agents of sapronotic dseases in aquatic ecosystems: a first spatially realistic metacommunity model

Archive ouverte

Sylla, Ahmadou | Chevillon, Christine | Djidjou-Demasse, Ramsès | Seydi, Ousmane | Campos, Carlos, a Vargas | Dogbe, Magdalene | Fast, Kayla, M | Pechal, Jennifer, L | Rakestraw, Alex | Scott, Matthew, E | Sandel, Michael, W | Jordan, Heather | Benbow, M, Eric | Guégan, Jean-François

Edité par CCSD ; PLOS -

International audience. Pathogens such as bacteria, fungi and viruses are important components of soil and aquatic communities, where they can benefit from decaying and living organic matter, and may opportunistically infect human and animal hosts. One-third of human infectious diseases is constituted by sapronotic disease agents that are natural inhabitants of soil or aquatic ecosystems. They are capable of existing and reproducing in the environment outside of the host for extended periods of time. However, as ecological research on sapronosis is infrequent and epidemiological models are even rarer, very little information is currently available. Their importance is overlooked in medical and veterinary research, as well as the relationships between free environmental forms and those that are pathogenic. Here, using dynamical models in realistic aquatic metacommunity systems, we analyze sapronosis transmission, using the human pathogen Mycobacterium ulcerans that is responsible for Buruli ulcer. Our work constitutes the first set of metacommunity models of sapronotic disease transmission, and is highly flexible for adaptation to other types of sapronosis. The importance of sapronotic agents on animal and human disease burden needs better understanding and new models of sapronosis disease ecology to guide the management and prevention of this important group of pathogens.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Land use and land-cover changes and emerging non-tuberculous and tuberculous infectious diseases in human and animals: a mixed-methods review of research findings from global and spatio-temporal perspectives

Archive ouverte | Guégan, Jean-François | CCSD

International audience. Despite recent interest in land-use and land-cover (LULC) change effects on emerging infectious diseases (EIDs), the debate on global potential health threats remains polarizing. These depend...

Ecological and evolutionary perspectives advance understanding of mycobacterial diseases

Archive ouverte | Chevillon, Christine | CCSD

International audience. Predicting the outbreak of infectious diseases and designing appropriate preventive health actions require interdisciplinary research into the processes that drive exposure to and transmissio...

A need for null models in understanding disease transmission: the example of Mycobacterium ulcerans (Buruli ulcer disease)

Archive ouverte | Receveur, Joseph | CCSD

International audience. Understanding the interactions of ecosystems, humans and pathogens is important for disease risk estimation. This is particularly true for neglected and newly emerging diseases where modes an...

Chargement des enrichissements...