Abstract

BackgroundThe environmental pathogen, Mycobacterium ulcerans (MU) can infect both humans and animals and cause Buruli ulcer (BU) disease. However, its mode(s) of transmission from the colonized environment to human/animal hosts remain unclear. In Australia, MU can infect both wildlife and domestic mammals. Till date, BU-like lesions have only been reported in wildlife in Africa. This warrants a thorough assessment of possible MU in domestic animals in Africa. Here, we screened roaming domesticated animals that share the human microhabitat in two different BU endemic sites, Sedje-Denou in Benin and Akonolinga in Cameroon, for MU lesions.Methodology/Principal findingsWe screened roaming mammals and birds across 3 endemic villages of Sedje-Denou in Southern Benin and 6 endemic villages of Akonolinga in Cameroon. After approval from relevant authorities, specimens (wound swabs and tissue fragments) were collected from animals with open or active lesion and systematically screened to detect the presence of MU though the diagnostic DNA targets IS2404, IS2606 and KR-B. Out of 397 animals surveyed in Akonolinga, 44 (11.08%) carried skin lesions and all were negative for MU DNA. For Sedje-Denou, only 25 (6.93%) out of 361 animals surveyed carried external skin lesions of which 2 (8%) were positive for MU DNA targets. These MU infected lesions were found in two different villages on a goat (abdominal part) and on a dog (nape area of the neck). Source-tracking of MU isolates within infected animal lesions was performed using VNTR genotyping and further confirmed with sequencing. One MU VNTR genotype (Z) was successfully typed from the goat lesion. The evolutionary history inferred from sequenced data revealed a clustering of animal MU isolates within isolates from human lesions.Conclusion/SignificanceThis study describes the first report of two MU infected lesions in domestic animals in Africa. Their DNA sequence analyses show close relationship to isolates from human cases. It suggests that MU infection should be suspected in domestic hosts and these could play a role in transmission. The findings further support the hypothesis that MU is a ubiquitous environmental pathogen found in endemic areas, and probably involved in a multiple transmission pathway.

Highlights

  • Buruli ulcer (BU), the necrotizing skin disease caused by M. ulcerans (MU) remains a major Public Health problem in more than 33 countries worldwide

  • The distribution of BU is global, its burden is highest in remote communities of West and Central African regions including Benin, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Democratic Republic of Congo and Cameroon; as well as some coastal localities of Australia

  • Using the “EcoHealth” concept, which is based on a holistic approach involving humans, animals and the environment for a better understanding of BU disease, we screened domestic animals for MU-lesions found in the endemic localities of Sedje-Denou (Benin) and Akonolinga (Cameroon) and sought to Mycobacterium ulcerans infected lesions found in domestic animals source-tracked these isolates using genomics

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Summary

Introduction

Buruli ulcer (BU), the necrotizing skin disease caused by M. ulcerans (MU) remains a major Public Health problem in more than 33 countries worldwide. The distribution of BU is global, its burden is highest in remote communities of West and Central African regions including Benin, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Democratic Republic of Congo and Cameroon; as well as some coastal localities of Australia. These African endemic areas recently reported the highest incidence of the disease with 89% of new cases reported in 2014 [1,2]. The environmental pathogen, Mycobacterium ulcerans (MU) can infect both humans and animals and cause Buruli ulcer (BU) disease. We screened roaming domesticated animals that share the human microhabitat in two different BU endemic sites, Sedje-Denou in Benin and Akonolinga in Cameroon, for MU lesions

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