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

Ancestral African Bats Brought Their Cargo of Pathogenic Leptospira to Madagascar under Cover of Colonization Events

View through CrossRef
Madagascar is home to an extraordinary diversity of endemic mammals hosting several zoonotic pathogens. Although the African origin of Malagasy mammals has been addressed for a number of volant and terrestrial taxa, the origin of their hosted zoonotic pathogens is currently unknown. Using bats and Leptospira infections as a model system, we tested whether Malagasy mammal hosts acquired these infections on the island following colonization events, or alternatively brought these bacteria from continental Africa. We first described the genetic diversity of pathogenic Leptospira infecting bats from Mozambique and then tested through analyses of molecular variance (AMOVA) whether the genetic diversity of Leptospira hosted by bats from Mozambique, Madagascar and Comoros is structured by geography or by their host phylogeny. This study reveals a wide diversity of Leptospira lineages shed by bats from Mozambique. AMOVA strongly supports that the diversity of Leptospira sequences obtained from bats sampled in Mozambique, Madagascar, and Comoros is structured according to bat phylogeny. Presented data show that a number of Leptospira lineages detected in bat congeners from continental Africa and Madagascar are imbedded within monophyletic clades, strongly suggesting that bat colonists have indeed originally crossed the Mozambique Channel while infected with pathogenic Leptospira.
Title: Ancestral African Bats Brought Their Cargo of Pathogenic Leptospira to Madagascar under Cover of Colonization Events
Description:
Madagascar is home to an extraordinary diversity of endemic mammals hosting several zoonotic pathogens.
Although the African origin of Malagasy mammals has been addressed for a number of volant and terrestrial taxa, the origin of their hosted zoonotic pathogens is currently unknown.
Using bats and Leptospira infections as a model system, we tested whether Malagasy mammal hosts acquired these infections on the island following colonization events, or alternatively brought these bacteria from continental Africa.
We first described the genetic diversity of pathogenic Leptospira infecting bats from Mozambique and then tested through analyses of molecular variance (AMOVA) whether the genetic diversity of Leptospira hosted by bats from Mozambique, Madagascar and Comoros is structured by geography or by their host phylogeny.
This study reveals a wide diversity of Leptospira lineages shed by bats from Mozambique.
AMOVA strongly supports that the diversity of Leptospira sequences obtained from bats sampled in Mozambique, Madagascar, and Comoros is structured according to bat phylogeny.
Presented data show that a number of Leptospira lineages detected in bat congeners from continental Africa and Madagascar are imbedded within monophyletic clades, strongly suggesting that bat colonists have indeed originally crossed the Mozambique Channel while infected with pathogenic Leptospira.

Related Results

Co-radiation of Leptospira and Tenrecidae (Afrotheria) on Madagascar
Co-radiation of Leptospira and Tenrecidae (Afrotheria) on Madagascar
Leptospirosis is a bacterial zoonosis caused by pathogenic Leptospira that are maintained in the kidney lumen of infected animals acting as reservoirs and contaminating the environ...
Cloning, expression and purification of Leptospira LigB antigen in Escherichia coli
Cloning, expression and purification of Leptospira LigB antigen in Escherichia coli
Leptospira is one of the most common zoonotic diseases in the tropics and subtropics. Humans are infected by exposure to Leptospira contained water or food sources. Leptospirosis u...
Leptospirosis and Coinfection: Should We Be Concerned?
Leptospirosis and Coinfection: Should We Be Concerned?
Pathogenic Leptospira is the causative agent of leptospirosis, an emerging zoonotic disease affecting animals and humans worldwide. The risk of host infection following interaction...
Prediction of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) infestation trends across fruit bats migratory seasons
Prediction of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) infestation trends across fruit bats migratory seasons
Abstract Background : The majority of the rural populace of West and Central Africa participate actively in bushmeat commodity trade. The peak of this trade usually occurs ...
Leptospira spp. of the Urinary Tract of Female Carrier Goats in Semi-Arid Conditions
Leptospira spp. of the Urinary Tract of Female Carrier Goats in Semi-Arid Conditions
Background: Leptospirosis is an important infectious disease in goat farming, with a worldwide distribution. It is usually transmitted by rodents and the genital route, may cause r...
Diversity of Leptospira Species and Their Rodent Reservoirs in the Guinean Forest
Diversity of Leptospira Species and Their Rodent Reservoirs in the Guinean Forest
Leptospirosis is a bacterial zoonosis caused by pathogenic species from the genus Leptospira. Infection mostly occurs through indirect contact with environmental water contaminated...
Bat coronavirus phylogeography in the Western Indian Ocean
Bat coronavirus phylogeography in the Western Indian Ocean
AbstractBats provide key ecosystem services such as crop pest regulation, pollination, seed dispersal, and soil fertilization. Bats are also major hosts for biological agents respo...
Effect of different speed and time of centrifugations on decontamination of Leptospira spp. cultures from rat’s kidney
Effect of different speed and time of centrifugations on decontamination of Leptospira spp. cultures from rat’s kidney
The centrifugal force in the centrifuge is able to change the surface properties of bacterial cells and the inner structure, including DNA, so that it can damage bacterial cells. T...

Back to Top