| Literature DB >> 28241042 |
Roman Thibeaux1, Sophie Geroult1, Claire Benezech1, Stéphane Chabaud2, Marie-Estelle Soupé-Gilbert1, Dominique Girault1, Emilie Bierque1, Cyrille Goarant1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Leptospirosis is an important re-emerging infectious disease that affects humans worldwide. Infection occurs from indirect environment-mediated exposure to pathogenic leptospires through contaminated watered environments. The ability of pathogenic leptospires to persist in the aqueous environment is a key factor in transmission to new hosts. Hence, an effort was made to detect pathogenic leptospires in complex environmental samples, to genotype positive samples and to assess leptospiral viability over time. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28241042 PMCID: PMC5344526 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005414
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Localization of the 6 investigated environmental sites.
A. Mapping of the 6 environmental sites investigated in this study. The map legend shows the incidence rate of leptospirosis per municipality, calculated over the 2007–2013 period. B. Photography showing rivers associated with activities of daily living where patients reported to be contaminated. Red arrowhead shows collected samples positive for pathogenic Leptospira DNA.
Summary of sampling data and results for the six areas investigated.
| Weeks Post Infection | City | Tribe | Coordinates | Infection date | Investigation date | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water | Soil | Other | |||||||
| Site 1 | 6 | Kaala Gomen | Baoui | 20°40.823S 64°26.895E | 02/02/2016 | 17/03/2016 | |||
| Site 2 | 9 | Koné | Koniambo | 20°59.988S | 02/02/2016 | 06/04/2016 | |||
| 19 | 164°52.415E | 13/06/2016 | |||||||
| Control site 1 | - | Bourail | Pouéo | 21°30.835S 165°30.436E | 06/04/2016 | ||||
| Control site 2 | - | Touho | Pombei | 20°54.220S 165°08.927E | 11/04/2016 | ||||
| Site 3 | 9 | North Touho | Tiouaé | 20°47.572S | 09/02/2016 | 11/04/2016 | |||
| 16 | 165°08.896E | 31/05/2016 | |||||||
| Site 4 | 10 | South Touho | Koé | 20°49.090S | 02/02/2016 | 12/04/2016 | |||
| 17 | 165°14.702E | 31/05/2016 | |||||||
| total | |||||||||
| % positive | |||||||||
Bold numbers represent positive samples for lipL-32 qPCR. Numbers in brackets represent the total number of samples analyzed.
* indicates the presence of a soil sampled above water level and positive for lipL-32 qPCR.
qPCR and v-PCR results and lfb-1 sequence analysis for the six investigated areas.
| Weeks Post Infection | PCR | PCR | v-PCR | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Site 1 | 6 | n.d. | |||
| Site 2 | 9 | + | |||
| 19 | - | n.d. | |||
| Control site 1 | - | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| Control site 2 | - | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| Site 3 | 9 | + | |||
| 16 | -; - | ||||
| Site 4 | 10 | -; + | |||
| 17 | - |
n.d.: not determined. Bold numbers represents positive samples for the corresponding qPCR. Numbers in brackets represent the total number of analyzed samples. Underlined results highlight the lfb-1 sequences obtained using v-PCR-treated DNA as template.
Fig 2Phylogenetic analysis of leptospiral lfb-1 gene sequences.
Sequences from the 4 patients are shown in red while clones from environmental soils samples obtained during the retrospective study are shown in blue (first environmental sampling) or green (late environmental sampling). Note the presence of the L. interrogans Pyrogenes NC lfb-1 sequence from the patient in all the corresponding investigated soils. lfb-1 sequence from Site 2 soil 2 was identify as L. interrogans Australis and indeed cluster with L. interrogans Australis NC. Several sequences for Site 4 either cluster with L. kmetyi (Soil1) or form a new branch within pathogenic Leptospira species (Soil 4 sequence 1, 2 and 3). Phylogenetic tree was built using Phylo-win program with 500 bootstrap replicates applying Neighbour Joining method and Kimura’s 2-parameter distances.