| Literature DB >> 28658269 |
Vanina Guernier1,2, Vaea Richard1, Tuxuan Nhan1, Eline Rouault1, Anita Tessier1, Didier Musso1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Leptospirosis is a highly endemic bacterial zoonosis in French Polynesia (FP). Nevertheless, data on the epidemiology of leptospirosis in FP are scarce. We conducted molecular studies on Leptospira isolated from humans and the potential main animal reservoirs in order to identify the most likely sources for human infection. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28658269 PMCID: PMC5507467 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005676
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Geographic localization of piggeries and rat sampling sites on Tahiti Island.
The pig kidneys tested for Leptospira infection originated from 17 herds representing 16 farms. Rats were trapped at 12 sampling sites, including five farms from which pig kidneys originated.
Fig 2Flowchart describing the steps of the molecular analysis.
Methods used to detect and to identify Leptospira species and genotypes from samples collected in French Polynesia are detailed. Seven-loci MLST was attempted only for a selected subgroup of the animal and human samples successfully amplified on secY locus using MLST scheme #1.
Leptospira detection and identification by host species.
The prevalence of renal infection by Leptospira in farm pigs and rodents is based on RT-qPCR detection results. Infecting Leptospira species were determined by PCR, targeting either secY, rrs (16S) or LipL32 gene in positive samples. The number of successful amplification for secY is provided. Based on the observed diversity within the secY gene, MLST amplifications were attempted on a subset of positive samples; the number of successful complete MLST on seven (or six) loci is given.
| Source | Identification success (%) | Infecting | 7-loci (or 6 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pig | 48/181 (26.5) | 30/48 (62.5) | 30 | 4/14 (5) | |
| 3/28 (10.7) | 2/3 (66.7) | 2 | 0/2 (1) | ||
| 19/79 (24.1) | 13/19 (68.4) | 12 | 3/12 (6) | ||
| 1/6 (16.7) | 1/1 (100) | 1 | 1/1 (1) | ||
| All rats | 23/113 (20.4) | 16/23 (69.6) | 15 | 4/15 (8) | |
| Dog | - | 2/4 (50) | 2 | 0 | |
| Human | - | 39/51 (76.5) | 33 | 4/9 (4) |
RR: Rattus rattus;
RN: Rattus norvegicus;
RE: Rattus exulans.
Li: Leptospira interrogans;
Lb: Leptospira borgpetersenii;
L*: undetermined species closely related to Leptospira mayottensis and Leptospira alexanderi.
a Amplification and sequencing success for the 6-loci MLST scheme excluding the locus caiB.
Fig 3Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree (model TN93+I; 1,000 replicates) inferred from LipL32 gene (229-bp sequence).
Clinical and animal samples from Tahiti are shown in light blue, clinical samples from other islands in French Polynesia (FP) in dark blue; referred to using identifiers accompanied by the host name. Corresponding GenBank accession numbers are reported in S5 Table. Published sequences included in the phylogeny are shown in black using the identified Leptospira species followed by GenBank accession numbers, the host species and the country of origin. The major genetic groups are highlighted with grey boxes (numbered 1 to 3). Bootstrap values higher than 70% are indicated by a dark circle. Black silhouettes represent host groups from FP (i.e. human, dog, pig or rat).
Fig 4Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree (model TN93+G; 1,000 replicates) inferred from secY gene (444-bp sequence).
Human and animal samples from Tahiti are shown in light blue and clinical samples from other islands in French Polynesia (FP) in dark blue; they are referred to using identifiers accompanied by the host name. Corresponding GenBank accession numbers are reported on S6 Table. Published sequences included in the phylogeny are written in black using GenBank accession numbers or ID (for samples from [33]) followed by the country of origin and the host species. Leptospira species are indicated for published sequences: Li: Leptospira interrogans; Lb: Leptospira borgpetersenii; Lk: Leptospira kirschneri; Lmay: Leptospira mayottensis. Bootstrap values higher than 70% are indicated by a dark circle. Black silhouettes represent host groups from FP (i.e. human, dog, pig or rat). Legend refers to the different clusters including samples from FP, with four clades (A to D) inside the species Leptospira interrogans.
MLST results by host species.
For each of the 17 samples referred to by a unique identifier (ID), the table provides the exact or most probable sequence type (ST or allelic profile), the infecting Leptospira species and the presumptive serovar associated with the ST. GenBank accession numbers of sequences for each of the seven MLST loci are reported in the supplementary information (S4 Table).
| STs | Presumptive serovars | ID | Host species | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 17 | Icterohaemorrhagiae (human, Japan Belgium) | 40814.21 | ||
| 17415.20 | ||||
| 21514.27 | ||||
| VG023 | ||||
| VG031 | ||||
| VG033 | ||||
| VG080 | ||||
| VG093 | ||||
| VG109 | ||||
| 140 | Pomona (human, Australia) | 177702 | ||
| 179533 | ||||
| 179540 | ||||
| 179824 | ||||
| 180192 | ||||
| 149 | Ballum (mouse, Denmark) | 240115.5 | ||
| VG070 | ||||
| VG106 |
STs: sequence types.
a The presumptive serovars corresponding to STs are based on information from the PubMLST database (http://pubmlst.org/leptospira/).
*Samples with incomplete MLST for which the nearest ST match is drawn from available loci and other complete MLST.