| Literature DB >> 23356487 |
Petra Griekspoor1, Frances M Colles, Noel D McCarthy, Philip M Hansbro, Chris Ashhurst-Smith, Björn Olsen, Dennis Hasselquist, Martin C J Maiden, Jonas Waldenström.
Abstract
Zoonotic pathogens often infect several animal species, and gene flow among populations infecting different host species may affect the biological traits of the pathogen including host specificity, transmissibility and virulence. The bacterium Campylobacter jejuni is a widespread zoonotic multihost pathogen, which frequently causes gastroenteritis in humans. Poultry products are important transmission vehicles to humans, but the bacterium is common in other domestic and wild animals, particularly birds, which are a potential infection source. Population genetic studies of C. jejuni have mainly investigated isolates from humans and domestic animals, so to assess C. jejuni population structure more broadly and investigate host adaptation, 928 wild bird isolates from Europe and Australia were genotyped by multilocus sequencing and compared to the genotypes recovered from 1366 domestic animal and human isolates. Campylobacter jejuni populations from different wild bird species were distinct from each other and from those from domestic animals and humans, and the host species of wild bird was the major determinant of C. jejuni genotype, while geographic origin was of little importance. By comparison, C. jejuni differentiation was restricted between more phylogenetically diverse farm animals, indicating that domesticated animals may represent a novel niche for C. jejuni and thereby driving the evolution of those bacteria as they exploit this niche. Human disease is dominated by isolates from this novel domesticated animal niche.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23356487 PMCID: PMC3596980 DOI: 10.1111/mec.12144
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ecol ISSN: 0962-1083 Impact factor: 6.185
Host origin, sampling year and sampling site of investigated Campylobacter jejuni strains
| Host species | Latin name | No. of isolates | Year | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mallard | 85 | 2002 | Sweden | |
| Dunlin | 21 | 2000 | Sweden | |
| 8 | 2001 | Sweden | ||
| Black-headed gull | 48 | 1999 | Sweden | |
| 49 | 2000 | Sweden | ||
| Starling | 7 | 2000 | Sweden | |
| 285 | 2002–2005 | UK | ||
| Geese | 166 | 2002–2003 | UK | |
| Blackbird | 32 | 2000 | Sweden | |
| 71 | 2001 | Sweden | ||
| 4 | 2006 | Australia | ||
| Song thrush | 84 | 2000 | Sweden | |
| Sharp-tailed sandpiper | 33 | 2004 | Australia | |
| 1 | 2005 | Australia | ||
| 12 | 2006 | Australia | ||
| Silver gull | 10 | 2004 | Australia | |
| 12 | 2006 | Australia | ||
| Chicken | 7 | 2000 | Senegal | |
| 23 | 2001 | Senegal | ||
| 16 | 2002 | Senegal | ||
| 217 | 1982–2003 | UK | ||
| Cattle | 218 | 1984–2001 | UK | |
| Sheep | 158 | 1982–2002 | UK | |
| Human | 574 | 2003–2004 | UK | |
| 153 | 1999–2001 | Australia | ||
| Total | 2294 |
Fig. 1Unrooted neighbour-joining tree displaying the pairwise genetic distances (FST values) between Campylobacter jejuni populations from different hosts and geographical areas. The FST values were calculated from nucleotide polymorphisms in the concatenated sequences from seven loci (3709 bp) in the 2294 C. jejuni isolates. All differences between sources were significant at P < 0.05.
Fig. 2A ClonalFrame genealogy of Campylobacter jejuni STs from wild birds, food animals and humans. From each of the 13 host species, 10 random C. jejuni isolates were drawn and included in the analysis. The source of isolates is indicated with different colour (see inset in the figure), and STs are given in numbers at the tip of branches.
Fig. 3Assignment of human isolates to food animals and wild bird populations. The probabilistic assignment of the Campylobacter jejuni host population was based on allele frequencies using the software structure. Each allelic profile is represented by a vertical bar, showing the estimated probability that it comes from each of the source identified. The horizontal coloured bar above the vertical bars indicate whether human isolates were from UK (blue) or from Australia (pink). Food animal related isolates are shown in shades of grey, while the isolates of different wild birds are denoted in colours: silver gull (light green), black-headed gull (dark green), blackbird (red), song thrush (purple), European starling (pink), goose species (yellow), mallards (orange), sharp-tailed sandpiper (dark blue), dunlin (light blue).