Literature DB >> 19717933

Where future emerging pathogens will come from and what approaches can be used to find them, besides VFARs.

Mark D Sobsey1, Suresh D Pillai.   

Abstract

A consideration of available evidence for some known and well-characterized waterborne pathogens suggests that the diversity of pathogen virulence mechanisms and properties is too great to specifically predict the emergence and future human health impacts of new waterborne pathogens. However, some future emerging pathogens are existing microbes that will be discovered to cause disease. Some will arise from existing ones by either predictable evolutionary and adaptation changes or by unpredictable changes involving a variety of biotic and abiotic mechanisms. Many, and perhaps most, emerging waterborne human pathogens will be zoonotic agents or come from other non-human reservoirs. The emergence of some waterborne pathogens will be related to antibiotic use, resulting in emerging antibiotic-resistant waterborne pathogens. Reliably predicting pathogen emergence and human health effects based on VFARs or other properties of microbes and their hosts is not possible at this time. This is because of (1) the diversity of microbes and their virulence and pathogenicity properties, (2) their ability to change unpredictably, (3) their intimate and diverse interrelationships with a myriad of hosts and dynamic natural and anthropogenic environments and (4) the subtle variations in the immune status of individuals. The best available approach to predicting waterborne pathogen emergence is through vigilant use of microbial, infectious disease and epidemiological surveillance. Understanding the microbial metagenome of the human body can also lead to a better understanding of how we define and characterize pathogens, commensals and opportunists.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19717933     DOI: 10.2166/wh.2009.096

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Water Health        ISSN: 1477-8920            Impact factor:   1.744


  3 in total

Review 1.  Integrated Multilevel Surveillance of the World's Infecting Microbes and Their Resistance to Antimicrobial Agents.

Authors:  Thomas F O'Brien; John Stelling
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Rev       Date:  2011-04       Impact factor: 26.132

Review 2.  Environmental Viral Metagenomics Analyses in Aquaculture: Applications in Epidemiology and Disease Control.

Authors:  Hetron M Munang'andu
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2016-12-14       Impact factor: 5.640

3.  From environment to man: genome evolution and adaptation of human opportunistic bacterial pathogens.

Authors:  Fabien Aujoulat; Frédéric Roger; Alice Bourdier; Anne Lotthé; Brigitte Lamy; Hélène Marchandin; Estelle Jumas-Bilak
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2012-03-26       Impact factor: 4.096

  3 in total

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