破译牛-獾-野猪多宿主系统中欧洲3克隆复杂循环中两种牛分枝杆菌基因型的宿主物种作用

IF 3.9 3区 生物学 Q2 MICROBIOLOGY
MicrobiologyOpen Pub Date : 2022-12-15 DOI:10.1002/mbo3.1331
L. Canini, Gabriela Modenesi, Aurélie Courcoul, M. Boschiroli, B. Durand, L. Michelet
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引用次数: 3

摘要

牛结核病是一种影响全世界牛和野生动物的常见疾病。牛分枝杆菌在野生动物中的传播降低了牛监测和控制计划的有效性。欧洲3克隆复合体的菌株在法国最常见。因此,我们的工作目的是调查牛和野生动物物种在两种牛分枝杆菌欧洲3株传播中的作用。2010年至2017年在两个不同地区(NAq的Nouvelle‐Aquitaine地区和Côte‐d’or dacimpartement, CdO)从獾、野猪和牛中收集的牛分支杆菌菌株的WGS用于进化模型,以推断三种物种之间的过渡。我们计算了宿主物种在两个连续节点之间的转换和持久性以及每棵树的平均转换次数。共采集样本144份,NAq 218份。在CdO中,有三种物种间的转换率突出:从牛到獾,从獾到野猪,从野猪到牛。在NAq,还确定了第四个转换率:从獾到牛。然而,宿主转换仍然是一个罕见的事件。我们的研究结果表明,野猪可能是獾和牛之间的中间宿主,在研究菌株的循环在CdO和NAq。我们的研究结果还突出了这两个地区之间的差异,表明过渡模式不仅取决于宿主物种,而且其他生态、景观和人为因素也很重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Deciphering the role of host species for two Mycobacterium bovis genotypes from the European 3 clonal complex circulation within a cattle‐badger‐wild boar multihost system

Deciphering the role of host species for two Mycobacterium bovis genotypes from the European 3 clonal complex circulation within a cattle‐badger‐wild boar multihost system
Bovine tuberculosis is a common disease affecting cattle and wildlife worldwide. Mycobacterium bovis circulation in wildlife decreases the efficacy of surveillance and control programs in cattle. Strains of the European 3 clonal complex are the most frequent in France. The aim of our work was hence to investigate the role played by cattle and wildlife species in the circulation of two M. bovis European 3 strains circulation. WGS of M. bovis strains collected between 2010 and 2017 in two distinct areas (Nouvelle‐Aquitaine region, NAq, and Côte‐d'Or département, CdO), from badgers, wild boars, and cattle were used in an evolutionary model to infer the transition between the three species. We computed host species transition and persistence between two consecutive nodes and the average number of transitions per tree. In total, 144 and 218 samples were collected respectively in CdO and NAq. In CdO, three between‐species transition rates stood out: from cattle to badgers, from badgers to wild boars, and from wild boars to cattle. In NAq an additional fourth transition rate was identified: from badgers to cattle. However, host transition remained a rare event. Our results suggest that wild boars could be an intermediary host between badgers and cattle in the circulation of the studied strains in CdO and NAq. Our results also highlight the differences between these two areas, suggesting that the transition pattern does not only depend on the host species and other ecological, landscape and anthropic factors are important.
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来源期刊
MicrobiologyOpen
MicrobiologyOpen MICROBIOLOGY-
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
78
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: MicrobiologyOpen is a peer reviewed, fully open access, broad-scope, and interdisciplinary journal delivering rapid decisions and fast publication of microbial science, a field which is undergoing a profound and exciting evolution in this post-genomic era. The journal aims to serve the research community by providing a vehicle for authors wishing to publish quality research in both fundamental and applied microbiology. Our goal is to publish articles that stimulate discussion and debate, as well as add to our knowledge base and further the understanding of microbial interactions and microbial processes. MicrobiologyOpen gives prompt and equal consideration to articles reporting theoretical, experimental, applied, and descriptive work in all aspects of bacteriology, virology, mycology and protistology, including, but not limited to: - agriculture - antimicrobial resistance - astrobiology - biochemistry - biotechnology - cell and molecular biology - clinical microbiology - computational, systems, and synthetic microbiology - environmental science - evolutionary biology, ecology, and systematics - food science and technology - genetics and genomics - geobiology and earth science - host-microbe interactions - infectious diseases - natural products discovery - pharmaceutical and medicinal chemistry - physiology - plant pathology - veterinary microbiology We will consider submissions across unicellular and cell-cluster organisms: prokaryotes (bacteria, archaea) and eukaryotes (fungi, protists, microalgae, lichens), as well as viruses and prions infecting or interacting with microorganisms, plants and animals, including genetic, biochemical, biophysical, bioinformatic and structural analyses. The journal features Original Articles (including full Research articles, Method articles, and Short Communications), Commentaries, Reviews, and Editorials. Original papers must report well-conducted research with conclusions supported by the data presented in the article. We also support confirmatory research and aim to work with authors to meet reviewer expectations. MicrobiologyOpen publishes articles submitted directly to the journal and those referred from other Wiley journals.
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