Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Recent emergence of new variants of Yersinia pestis in Madagascar

View through CrossRef
Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague, has been responsible for at least three pandemics. During the last pandemic, which started in Hong Kong in 1894, the microorganism colonized new, previously unscathed geographical areas where it has become well established. The aim of this longitudinal study was to investigate the genetic stability of Y. pestis strains introduced into a new environment just under a century ago and to follow the epidemiology of any new genetic variant detected. In the present study, 187 strains of Y. pestis isolated between 1939 and 1996 from different regions of Madagascar and responsible mainly for human cases of bubonic and pneumonic plague were studied. Our principal genotyping method was rRNA gene profiling (ribotyping), which has previously been shown to be an effective scheme for typing Y. pestis strains of different geographical origins. We report that all studied Y. pestis strains isolated in Madagascar before 1982 were of classical ribotype B, the ribotype attributed to the Y. pestis clone that spread around the world during the third pandemic. In 1982, 1983, and 1994, strains with new ribotypes, designated R, Q, and T, respectively, were isolated on the high-plateau region of the island. Analysis of other genotypic traits such as the NotI genomic restriction profiles and the EcoRV plasmid restriction profiles revealed that the new variants could also be distinguished by specific genomic and/or plasmid profiles. A follow-up of these new variants indicated that strains of ribotypes Q and R have become well established in their ecosystem and have a tendency to spread to new geographical areas and supplant the original classical strain.
Title: Recent emergence of new variants of Yersinia pestis in Madagascar
Description:
Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague, has been responsible for at least three pandemics.
During the last pandemic, which started in Hong Kong in 1894, the microorganism colonized new, previously unscathed geographical areas where it has become well established.
The aim of this longitudinal study was to investigate the genetic stability of Y.
pestis strains introduced into a new environment just under a century ago and to follow the epidemiology of any new genetic variant detected.
In the present study, 187 strains of Y.
pestis isolated between 1939 and 1996 from different regions of Madagascar and responsible mainly for human cases of bubonic and pneumonic plague were studied.
Our principal genotyping method was rRNA gene profiling (ribotyping), which has previously been shown to be an effective scheme for typing Y.
pestis strains of different geographical origins.
We report that all studied Y.
pestis strains isolated in Madagascar before 1982 were of classical ribotype B, the ribotype attributed to the Y.
pestis clone that spread around the world during the third pandemic.
In 1982, 1983, and 1994, strains with new ribotypes, designated R, Q, and T, respectively, were isolated on the high-plateau region of the island.
Analysis of other genotypic traits such as the NotI genomic restriction profiles and the EcoRV plasmid restriction profiles revealed that the new variants could also be distinguished by specific genomic and/or plasmid profiles.
A follow-up of these new variants indicated that strains of ribotypes Q and R have become well established in their ecosystem and have a tendency to spread to new geographical areas and supplant the original classical strain.

Related Results

Modulation of Yersinia pestis virulence involving the flagellin locus and phase variation
Modulation of Yersinia pestis virulence involving the flagellin locus and phase variation
Modulation de la virulence de Yersinia pestis impliquant le locus de la flagelline et un processus de variation de phase En tant que source de pandémies mondiales, ...
High Homogeneity of the Yersinia pestis Fatty Acid Composition
High Homogeneity of the Yersinia pestis Fatty Acid Composition
ABSTRACT The cellular fatty acid compositions of 29 strains of Yersinia pestis representing the global diversity of this species have...
Genetic Diversity and Spatial Distribution of Yersinia pestis by Core Genome-Based Multilocus Sequence Typing Analysis
Genetic Diversity and Spatial Distribution of Yersinia pestis by Core Genome-Based Multilocus Sequence Typing Analysis
Yersinia pestis is the etiological agent of plague, a severe and often fatal disease in humans when left untreated. Because of the high genetic clonality of Y. pestis, high-resolut...
The high‐pathogenicity island of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis can be inserted into any of the three chromosomal asn tRNA genes
The high‐pathogenicity island of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis can be inserted into any of the three chromosomal asn tRNA genes
Pathogenicity islands (PAIs) have been identified in several bacterial species. A PAI called high‐pathogenicity island (HPI) and carrying genes involved in iron acquisition (yersin...
Regulatory Functions of PurR in Yersinia pestis: Orchestrating Diverse Biological Activities
Regulatory Functions of PurR in Yersinia pestis: Orchestrating Diverse Biological Activities
The bacterium Yersinia pestis has developed various strategies to sense and respond to the complex stresses encountered during its transmission and pathogenic processes. PurR is a ...
Does Yersinia Induce Autoimmunity?
Does Yersinia Induce Autoimmunity?
Yersinia enterocolitica O:3 and the human thyrotropin receptor share a structural similarity, revealed by their serological cross-reactivity. The exact molecular basis of the simil...

Back to Top