| Literature DB >> 20102584 |
Lizeth Lacharme-Lora1, Vyv Salisbury, Tom J Humphrey, Kathryn Stafford, Sarah E Perkins.
Abstract
Bacterial pathogens are ubiquitous in soil and water - concurrently so are free-living helminths that feed on bacteria. These helminths fall into two categories; the non-parasitic and the parasitic. The former have been the focus of previous work, finding that bacterial pathogens inside helminths are conferred survival advantages over and above bacteria alone in the environment, and that accidental ingestion of non-parasitic helminths can cause systemic infection in vertebrate hosts. Here, we determine the potential for bacteria to be associated with parasitic helminths. After culturing helminths from fecal samples obtained from livestock the external bacteria were removed. Two-hundred parasitic helminths from three different species were homogenised and the bacteria that were internal to the helminths were isolated and cultured. Eleven different bacterial isolates were found; of which eight were indentified. The bacteria identified included known human and cattle pathogens. We concluded that bacteria of livestock can be isolated in parasitic helminths and that this suggests a mechanism by which bacteria, pathogenic or otherwise, can be transmitted between individuals. The potential for helminths to play a role as pathogen vectors poses a potential livestock and human health risk. Further work is required to assess the epidemiological impact of this finding.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20102584 PMCID: PMC2796495 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-8-S1-S17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Figure 1. A fluorescent microscopy image of the free-living helminth Ceanorhabitis elegans that had fed, for 36 hours, on a lawn of Salmonella Typhimurium that are expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP), so that the bacteria emitted phosphorescent light. Bacteria were externally removed from the C. elegans and can be clearly seen in the intestine.
Bacteria isolated from helminths cultured from feaces samples of livestock. A list of bacteria isolated from three different species of parasitic helminths. An indication of whether the bacteria are pathogenic or commensal and the type of infection they produce are given.
| Bacteria | Helminth | Host | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cattle | Human and animal pathogen - found in sheep, cattle and horses. | ||
| Cattle | Unknown pathogenicity in cattle. | ||
| Cattle | Cattle commensal. | ||
| CDC group II-E subgroup A | Cattle | Unknown pathogenicity in sheep. | |
| Cattle | Unknown pathogenicity in sheep. | ||
| Cattle | Unknown pathogenicity in sheep. | ||
| Sheep | Unknown pathogenicity in sheep. | ||
| Sheep | Sheep commensal. |