Topography and land cover of watersheds predicts the distribution of the environmental pathogen Mycobacterium ulcerans in aquatic insects

PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2014 Nov 6;8(11):e3298. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003298. eCollection 2014.

Abstract

Background: An understanding of the factors driving the distribution of pathogens is useful in preventing disease. Often we achieve this understanding at a local microhabitat scale; however the larger scale processes are often neglected. This can result in misleading inferences about the distribution of the pathogen, inhibiting our ability to manage the disease. One such disease is Buruli ulcer, an emerging neglected tropical disease afflicting many thousands in Africa, caused by the environmental pathogen Mycobacterium ulcerans. Herein, we aim to describe the larger scale landscape process describing the distribution of M. ulcerans.

Methodology: Following extensive sampling of the community of aquatic macroinvertebrates in Cameroon, we select the 5 dominant insect Orders, and conduct an ecological niche model to describe how the distribution of M. ulcerans positive insects changes according to land cover and topography. We then explore the generalizability of the results by testing them against an independent dataset collected in a second endemic region, French Guiana.

Principal findings: We find that the distribution of the bacterium in Cameroon is accurately described by the land cover and topography of the watershed, that there are notable seasonal differences in distribution, and that the Cameroon model does not predict the distribution of M. ulcerans in French Guiana.

Conclusions/significance: Future studies of M. ulcerans would benefit from consideration of local structure of the local stream network in future sampling, and further work is needed on the reasons for notable differences in the distribution of this species from one region to another. This work represents a first step in the identification of large-scale environmental drivers of this species, for the purposes of disease risk mapping.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Buruli Ulcer / epidemiology*
  • Buruli Ulcer / transmission
  • Cameroon / epidemiology
  • Disease Reservoirs / microbiology*
  • Environment
  • Geographic Mapping
  • Insecta / microbiology*
  • Mycobacterium ulcerans / genetics
  • Mycobacterium ulcerans / isolation & purification*

Grants and funding

This work was supported by a grant from the French National Research agency (ANR 11-CEPL-00704 EXTRA-MU) with additional funding from the Young International Research Team of AIRD/IRD (JEAI ATOMyc) and an “Investissement d'Avenir” grant managed by Agence Nationale de la Recherche (CEBA, ref. ANR-10-LABX-25-01) through its integrative research programme BIOHOPSYS on Biodiversity and infectious diseases. KC is funded by a PhD studentship from ANR EXTRA-MU and LabEx CEBA (grant ANR-10-LABX-25-01), AG from a PhD studentship from the EHESP, and AM from a PhD studentship from Bournemouth University. GEGP received a post-doctoral fellowship from Fondation pour la Recherche sur la Biodiversité (FRB) and its Centre de Synthèse et d'Analyse sur la Biodiversité (CESAB, research programme BIODIS). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.