| Literature DB >> 31287787 |
Aurélie Hennebique1,2, Sandrine Boisset1,2, Max Maurin1,2.
Abstract
Francisella tularensis is a Gram-negative, intracellular bacterium causing the zoonosis tularemia. This highly infectious microorganism is considered a potential biological threat agent. Humans are usually infected through direct contact with the animal reservoir and tick bites. However, tularemia cases also occur after contact with a contaminated hydro-telluric environment. Water-borne tularemia outbreaks and sporadic cases have occurred worldwide in the last decades, with specific clinical and epidemiological traits. These infections represent a major public health and military challenge. Human contaminations have occurred through consumption or use of F. tularensis-contaminated water, and various aquatic activities such as swimming, canyoning and fishing. In addition, in Sweden and Finland, mosquitoes are primary vectors of tularemia due to infection of mosquito larvae in contaminated aquatic environments. The mechanisms of F. tularensis survival in water may include the formation of biofilms, interactions with free-living amoebae, and the transition to a 'viable but nonculturable' state, but the relative contribution of these possible mechanisms remains unknown. Many new aquatic species of Francisella have been characterized in recent years. F. tularensis likely shares with these species an ability of long-term survival in the aquatic environment, which has to be considered in terms of tularemia surveillance and control.Entities:
Keywords: species; Tularemia; amoeba; aquatic environment; bacterial biofilms; mosquitoes; waterborne diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31287787 PMCID: PMC6691783 DOI: 10.1080/22221751.2019.1638734
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Microbes Infect ISSN: 2222-1751 Impact factor: 7.163
Tularemia outbreaks and sporadic cases related to drinking water.
| Country | Year of occurrence | Number of cases | Clinical forms (n) | Source of infection (water detection of | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bulgaria | 1997–2005 | 285 | OP (275), UG (6), OG (4) | Drinking water mainly from private wells (culture, pos) | [ | |
| Georgia | 2006 | 26 | OP (21), GL (5) | Using water from the community water supply (culture, pos) | NS | [ |
| Germany | 2007 | 1 | OP | Drinking surface water (NS) | [ | |
| Italy | 1988 | 24 | OP (12), OG (1), AS (11) | Drinking water (NS) | NS | [ |
| Kosovo | 1999–2000 | > 200 | OP | Drinking water or eating food (Ag, neg) | NS | [ |
| 2001–2002 | > 200 | OP | Drinking water or eating food (Ag, neg) | NS | [ | |
| Macedonia | 2015 | 13 | NS | Drinking water (NS) | NS | [ |
| Norway | 1997 | 8 | OP or UG | Drinking water from wells (one well with a lemming carcass PCR-positive for | NS | [ |
| 2006 | 9 | OP (5), GL (3), UN (1) | Drinking water from private wells or eating snow (PCR, pos) | NS | [ | |
| 2011 | 39 | OP (21), UG or GL (10), PN (2), TY (2), AS (3), UN (1) | Drinking water from private wells or stream (PCR, pos) | NS | [ | |
| Sweden | NS | 1 | OP | Drinking water from a well (NS) | [ | |
| 2013 | 6 | OP | Drinking water from a private well (culture, pos) | NS | [ | |
| Turkey | 1988–1998 | 205 | OP (83%), OG (8%), UN (9%) | Drinking water (NS) | NS | [ |
| NS | 1 | OP | Drinking water from a well (culture, neg) | NS | [ | |
| 2001 | 14 | OP | Drinking village pipe water (culture, neg) | NS | [ | |
| 2005 | 5 | OP | Drinking natural spring water (PCR, neg) | NS | [ | |
| 2005 | 10 | OP (7), AS (3) | Drinking spring water (culture, neg and PCR, pos) | NS | [ | |
| 2004–2005 | 54 | OP | Drinking water (PCR, neg) | NS | [ | |
| 2004–2005 | 39 | OP | Drinking water (NS) | NS | [ | |
| NS | 2 | OP | Drinking water (NS) | NS | [ | |
| 2005 | 11 | OP (8), OG (3) | Drinking village fountain water (PCR, pos) | NS | [ | |
| 2004–2005 | 145 | OP | Drinking spring water (NS) | [ | ||
| 2005 | 70 | OP mostly | Drinking natural spring water (culture, neg) | NS | [ | |
| 2004 | 86 | OP mostly | Drinking water from a rivulet (PCR, pos) | NS | [ | |
| 2004–2005 | 135 | OP | Drinking natural spring water (PCR, neg) | NS | [ | |
| 2000 | 22 | OP (19), UG (3) | Drinking spring water (PCR positive for | NS | [ | |
| 2005–2006 | 58 | OP | Drinking natural spring water (PCR, pos) | [ | ||
| NS | 1 | OG | Drinking and washing face with spring water (NS) | NS | [ | |
| NS | 3 | OP | Drinking spring water (NS) | [ | ||
| NS | 4 | OP | Drinking water (NS) | NS | [ | |
| 2011 | 2 | PN (with bacteremia) | Drinking water (culture, pos) | [ | ||
| 2010 | 4 | OP (3), OP and OG (1) | Drinking (3) or exposure (1) to natural spring water (NS) | NS | [ | |
| 2009–2011 | 139 | OP (74%), GL (15.8%), OG (5%) | Drinking spring water (PCR, pos) | NS | [ | |
| NS | 2 | OP (with abdominal lymphadenopathy) | Drinking natural spring water (NS) | NS | [ | |
| NS | 3 | OP | Drinking natural spring water (NS) | NS | [ | |
| 2010–2012 | 110 | OP or GL | Drinking water (PCR, pos) | NS | [ | |
| 2013 | 55 | OP | Drinking tap water contaminated by surface water (culture, neg) | NS | [ | |
| 2008, 2009 and 2012 | 89, 54 and 35 | OP | Drinking water (culture, pos) | NS | [ |
(NS) Not specified; Clinical forms: ulceroglandular (UG), glandular (GL), oropharyngeal (OP), oculoglandular (OG), pneumonic (PN), typhoidal (TY), asymptomatic (AS), and unknown form (UN); (Ag) F. tularensis antigen detection; (pos) positive, (neg) negative.
Tularemia outbreaks and sporadic cases related to mosquito bites.
| Country | Year of occurrence | Number of cases | Clinical forms | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Finland | 2000 | 1 | UG | [ | |
| 2007 | 50 | UG mostly | [ | ||
| 2010 | 1 | UG | [ | ||
| Germany | NS | 1 | UG | [ | |
| Sweden | 1981, 1995, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, and 2004 | 349 | UG mostly | [ | |
| 2000–2004 | 278 | UG | [ | ||
| 2000 | 105 | UG mostly | [ | ||
| 2003 | 475 | NS | [ | ||
| 2006 | 90 | NS | [ |
(NS) Not specified; Clinical forms: ulceroglandular (UG).
Tularemia outbreaks and sporadic cases related to other aquatic sources.
| Country | Year of occurrence | Number of cases | Clinical forms (n) | Source of infection | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | NS | 1 | UG | Suspicion of finger injury while cleaning freshwater fishes | [ | |
| Finland | NS | 1 | PN | Near-drowning accident | NS | [ |
| France | NS | 1 | PN with bacteremia | Near-drowning accident while fishing in a river | [ | |
| 2008–2014 | 3 | Otomastoiditis | Canyoneering in the same river | [ | ||
| Spain | 1998 | 19 | UG and GL | Crayfish fishing in a river | [ | |
| Turkey | 2007 | 3 | OP | Swimming in the same lake | [ | |
| 2010 | 1 | GL | Swimming in freshwater | NS | [ | |
| USA | 2000–2006 (Martha’s Vineyard island) | 59 | PN (38), UG or GL (9), TY (2), OP (1) | Water environmental source likely | [ | |
| 2016 | 1 | UG | Finger injury while fishing in a freshwater lake. | [ |
(NS) Not specified; Clinical forms: ulceroglandular (UG), glandular (GL), oropharyngeal (OP), pneumonic (PN), and typhoidal (TY).
Human infections caused by Francisella species other than F. tularensis related to aquatic sources.
| Country | Year of occurrence | Number of cases | Clinical forms | Source of infection | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | NS | 1 | UG | Cut in the toe in brackish water | [ | |
| NS | 1 | NS, bacteremia | Cut with a fishhook while fishing | [ | ||
| Canada | NS | 1 | OP and PN | Skin abrasion from a saltwater crab | [ | |
| Spain | NS | 1 | OP | Holiday activities in the Mediterranean sea | [ | |
| Turkey | NS | 1 | TY | Swimming in the sea and taking mud baths | [ | |
| USA | 1977–1985 | 5 | PN, bacteremia | Near-drowning accident in saltwater or brackish water | [ | |
| 1995 | 1 | NS, bacteremia | Use of water from a private well for food preparation and bathing | [ | ||
| NS | 1 | NS, bacteremia | Working in the brackish water of Assawoman Bay in Maryland | [ | ||
| NS | 1 | TY | Practice of jet-ski in a bay in the Atlantic Ocean | [ | ||
| NS | 1 | NS, bacteremia | Near-drowning accident while surfing in the Atlantic Ocean | [ | ||
| 2001 | 1 | NS | Exposure to hot spring water near a salt-lake | [ | ||
| NS | 1 | UG | Suspicion of infection through contact of an open wound in brackish water | Species close to | [ | |
| 2011 | 3 | NS, bacteremia | Consumption of ice from ice machines | [ |
(NS) Not specified; Clinical forms: ulceroglandular (UG), glandular (GL), oropharyngeal (OP), oculoglandular (OG), pneumonic (PN), and typhoidal (TY).
Detection of Francisella species in water samples.
| Country | Year of sampling | Type of water samples (n) | Testing methods | Findings (n samples) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| China | 2008 | Cooling towers (NS) | Culture and strain identification by fatty acid analysis, and 16S rRNA, 23S rRNAs, | [ | |
| 2009–2011 | Cooling towers (312) | Culture and strain identification by 16S rRNA, | [ | ||
| 2008 and after | Cooling towers (NS) | Culture and strain identification by mass spectrometry, fatty acid analysis, and 16S rRNA, | [ | ||
| Germany | 2005–2006 | NS (28) | PCR targeting 16S rRNA and | [ | |
| 2012 | Cooling tower (NS) | Culture and strain identification by 16S rRNA, | [ | ||
| Netherlands | 2013–2017 | Surface water collected from areas with reported human or hare tularemia cases (127) or unrelated to recent tularemia cases (339) | PCR targeting | [ | |
| Norway | 2010 | Seawater (149) or freshwater (64) | PCR sequencing of 16S rRNA; and for positive samples | [ | |
| Sweden | 2003– 2005 | Surface water (341) | PCR sequencing of | [ | |
| Turkey | 2008 - 2009 | Rivers, spring waters or village fountains in tularemia-endemic areas (154) | Culture and strains identification by 16S rRNA gene sequencing; and PCR targeting IS | [ | |
| Ukraine | 1941– 2008 | NS (NS) | Culture | [ | |
| USA | 2003 | NS (23) | PCR sequencing of 16S rDNA; and for positive samples | [ | |
| NS | Seawater (NS) | Culture (CHAB-PACCV medium) and strains identification by PCR sequencing of 16S rRNA and | [ | ||
| 2005– 2007 (Martha’s Vineyard island) | Fresh-water (35) or brackish-water (42) | Culture and PCR targeting 16S rRNA gene; for positive samples | No positive fresh-water samples. | [ | |
| NS | Hot or cold spring waters near a salt lake (NS) | Culture and strain identification by fatty acid analyses, ribotyping and 16S rRNA gene sequencing | [ | ||
| NS | Cooling tower (NS) | NS | [ | ||
| Cargo ships* | 2007–2008 | Ballast water from 5 general cargo ships (NS) | PCR sequencing of 16S rRNA gene | [ |
(NS) Not specified; * Cargo ships from Columbia, Republic of the Congo, USA, Canada, and Iran.
Figure 1.Potential aquatic sources of human infections with Francisella tularensis. Francisella tularensis is released into water from animals. The bacterium is able to survive in water (W), in mosquito larvae (L), in biofilms (B), or in cooperation with amoeba (A). Human can be contaminated from the aquatic reservoir by drinking contaminated water (D), after a mosquito bite (M), or during swimming (S) and fishing (F) activities.