| Literature DB >> 27209077 |
Carlos Franco-Paredes1,2, Alfonso J Rodriguez-Morales3.
Abstract
Leprosy, a chronic mycobacterial infection caused by Mycobacterium leprae, is an infectious disease that has ravaged human societies throughout millennia. This ancestral pathogen causes disfiguring cutaneous lesions, peripheral nerve injury, ostearticular deformity, limb loss and dysfunction, blindness and stigma. Despite ongoing efforts in interrupting leprosy transmission, large numbers of new cases are persistently identified in many endemic areas. Moreover, at the time of diagnosis, most newly identified cases have considerable neurologic disability. Many challenges remain in our understanding of the epidemiology of leprosy including: (a) the precise mode and route of transmission; (b) the socioeconomic, environmental, and behavioral factors that promote its transmission; and (c) strategies to achieve early diagnosis and prevent neurologic impairment to reduce the large burden of disability among newly identified cases; and among those who endure long-term disability in spite of completing multidrug therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Disability; Elimination; Hansen’s disease; Histiocytes; Leprosy; Leprosy reactions; Mycobacterium leprae; Peripheral nerve; Schwann cell; Sequelae
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27209077 PMCID: PMC4875741 DOI: 10.1186/s12941-016-0149-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Microbiol Antimicrob ISSN: 1476-0711 Impact factor: 3.944
Comparison of the three major pathogenic species within the Mycobacterium genus
| Features |
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| Genome | Genome of 4.4 Mb with 4000 genes and only six pseudogenes (91 % coding capacity) | Reductive evolution and large pseudogene (1116) formation resulting in a 3.31-Mb genome |
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| Target cell of infection |
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| Pathogenic mechanisms | Intracellular persistence in macrophages causes necrotizing granulomas that cause tissue destruction in the lung or other organs | Infection of Schwann cells leads to peripheral nerve dysfunction secondary to demyelination | Destructive ulcerative ulcers (Buruli ulcer) with subcutaneous fat necrosis |
| Environmental determinants | Members of the | Clustering of cases by geospatial assessments of thermal-hydrological determinants in Ethiopia and India |
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| Vector transmission |
| Some mosquitoese
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| Effect of BCG (Bacille-Calmette-Guérin) | Protection for disseminated tuberculosis including tuberculous meningitis in children <4 years of age | Variable degree of protection from different reports | Offers important protection against Buruli ulcer |
Many mycobacterial species may cause skin and soft tissue infections including M. tuberculosis, M. leprae, M. ulcerans, M. marinum, M. hemophilus, M. kansasii, M. abscessus, M. fortuitum, and M. chelonei (Refs. [73])
a Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex consists of seven species capable of causing tuberculosis (M. canetti, M. pinnipedii, M. africae (subtypes Ia, Ib and II), M. microti, M. caprae, M. bovis, M. bovis BCG, Dassie bacillus)
b Mycobacterium marinum is a closely related species to M. ulcerans. Mycolatone is the toxin produced by M. ulcerans is responsible for causing cutaneous and subcutaneous ulceration (tissue necrosis) and associated local and systemic immunosuppression
cMycolactone produced inhibition of protein translocation into the endoplasmic reticulum resulting in a deficit release of innate immune system cytokines, membrane receptors, adhesion molecules, and specific immune system cytokines
dOf the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex, M. bovis and M. caprae are found in hosts domesticated 10,000–12,000 years ago, earlier ancestral species infected humans many years before that era and subsequently spread to other hosts directly from humans or through an unknown vector
eThere are several biting arthropods residing in leprosy endemic areas of which any could potentially act as a vector for the transmission of leprosy
A potential research and policy roadmap to reduce leprosy transmission
| Categories | Key considerations | Suggestions |
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| Understanding pathogenic mycobacterial ecosystems |
| Further studies to address zoonotic transmission by armadillos in Latin America |
| Epidemiological clues linked to historical population migration events | There are important associations between the spread of leprosy to migration patterns of earlier human societies and trade routes (i.e., the Silk Road that United Europe to China contributed to the spread of leprosy); or to historical events corresponding to the returning expeditionary forces of antiquity spreading the pathogen from the Middle-Eastern strain of | Evaluate transmission networks |
| Early diagnosis, treatment and prevention of neurologic disability | Early identification of subclinical cases may assist in interrupting the course of the natural history of the disease by preventing the occurrence of clinical manifestations including and its associated nerve injury; and from a public health perspective to potentially decrease spillage of | Epidemiologic mapping of hot zones of transmission |
| Preventing leprosy reactions | Leprosy reactions may occur during multi-drug therapy (MDT) or even after completing MDT | Early diagnosis of leprosy cases |
a Mycobacterium leprae has the ability to reprogram the Schwann cell into a stem-cell-like cell that carries the bacilli into other tissues to ensure its dissemination. Given this systemic dissemination it seems feasible to search for the development of assays such as an interferon—assay employing a similar approach to the one used for detection of cytokine-production patterns by M. tuberculosis