通过统计和全基因组分析探讨流行病学和临床因素对犬利什曼病进展的影响:从品种易感性到合并症

IF 3.7 2区 医学 Q1 PARASITOLOGY
Carolina R. Sanz , Juliana Sarquis , María Ángeles Daza , Guadalupe Miró
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引用次数: 0

摘要

犬利什曼病(CanL)是一种复杂的疾病,在欧洲的重要性与日俱增。通过宿主与寄生虫之间的多重相互作用,宿主的免疫反应发生下调,从而导致临床表现。尽管有多种因素可能会影响卡氏锥虫病的发展,但这是第一项已知的研究,它评估了流行地区大型转诊医院人群(= 35.669)在 20 年间不同临床阶段的风险因素。研究还对选择特征进行了全基因组扫描,以探索临床感染易感性的基因组成分。CanL的发病率为3.2%(16.7%为I期;43.6%为II期;32.1%为III期;7.6%为IV期)。狗的品种(杂交)、体重(小于 10 千克)、生活条件(室内)、定期驱虫治疗和接种疫苗都能显著降低传播风险和出现严重临床症状的风险。相反,合并症的发现与晚期临床症状有关,特别是慢性肾病、肿瘤、隐睾症、感染性气管支气管炎和尿酸盐性尿路结石,尽管这些疾病对临床结果没有影响。此外,还发现严重临床阶段风险的增加与病史(肾脏或皮肤相关表现)和体格检查(眼部检查结果)结果之间存在显著关联,这凸显了它们在 CanL 转诊病例中的诊断价值。研究发现,16 个品种(如大丹犬、罗威纳犬、英国史宾格猎犬、拳师犬、美国斯塔福德郡梗犬、金毛寻回猎犬)更易患利什曼病的严重阶段,而 20 个品种(如尖吻犬、萨摩耶犬、西班牙獒犬、西班牙灰猎犬、英国赛特犬、西伯利亚哈士奇犬)表现出临床抵抗表型,因此更有可能对其产生有效的免疫反应。对这些品种的基因组分析检索出了 12 个选择区域、63 个候选基因,并确定了多种生物通路,如未折叠蛋白反应的 IRE1 分支,这些通路可能在临床感染易感性中发挥关键作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Exploring the impact of epidemiological and clinical factors on the progression of canine leishmaniosis by statistical and whole genome analyses: from breed predisposition to comorbidities

Exploring the impact of epidemiological and clinical factors on the progression of canine leishmaniosis by statistical and whole genome analyses: from breed predisposition to comorbidities

Exploring the impact of epidemiological and clinical factors on the progression of canine leishmaniosis by statistical and whole genome analyses: from breed predisposition to comorbidities

Canine leishmaniosis (CanL), caused by Leishmania infantum, is a complex disease of growing importance in Europe. Clinical manifestations result from the down-modulation of the host immune response through multiple host-parasite interactions. Although several factors might influence CanL progression, this is the first known study evaluating risk factors for its different clinical stages in a large referral hospital population (n = 35.669) from an endemic area, over a 20 year period. Genome-wide scans for selection signatures were also conducted to explore the genomic component of clinical susceptibility to L. infantum infection. The prevalence of CanL was 3.2% (16.7% stage I; 43.6% stage II; 32.1% stage III; 7.6% stage IV). Dog breed (crossbreed), bodyweight (<10 kg), living conditions (indoors), regular deworming treatment, and being vaccinated against Leishmania significantly decreased the transmission risk and the risk for developing severe clinical forms. Conversely, the detection of comorbidities was associated with advanced clinical forms, particularly chronic kidney disease, neoplasia, cryptorchidism, infectious tracheobronchitis and urate urolithiasis, although those did not impact the clinical outcome. Significant associations between an increased risk of severe clinical stages and findings in the anamnesis (renal or skin-related manifestations) and physical examination (ocular findings) were also detected, highlighting their diagnostic value in referred cases of CanL. Sixteen breeds were found to be significantly more susceptible to developing severe stages of leishmaniosis (e.g. Great Dane, Rottweiler, English Springer Spaniel, Boxer, American Staffordshire Terrier, Golden Retriever), while 20 breeds displayed a clinical resistantance phenotype and, thus, are more likely to mount an efficient immune response against L. infantum (e.g. Pointer, Samoyed, Spanish Mastiff, Spanish Greyhound, English Setter, Siberian Husky). Genomic analyses of these breeds retrieved 12 regions under selection, 63 candidate genes and pinpointed multiple biological pathways such as the IRE1 branch of the unfolded protein response, which could play a critical role in clinical susceptibility to L. infantum infection.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
2.50%
发文量
76
审稿时长
23 days
期刊介绍: International Journal for Parasitology offers authors the option to sponsor nonsubscriber access to their articles on Elsevier electronic publishing platforms. For more information please view our Sponsored Articles page. The International Journal for Parasitology publishes the results of original research in all aspects of basic and applied parasitology, including all the fields covered by its Specialist Editors, and ranging from parasites and host-parasite relationships of intrinsic biological interest to those of social and economic importance in human and veterinary medicine and agriculture.
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