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Public and animal health risks associated with spillover of Brucella melitensis into dairy farms

Brucellosis is a worldwide zoonosis with important public health, animal health and economic implications. Brucella melitensis , commonly associated with small ruminants, is an emerging bovine pathogen in dairy farms. We analysed all B. melitensis outbreaks affecting dairy farms in Israel since 2006...

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Autores principales: Bardenstein, Svetlana, Grupel, Daniel, Blum, Shlomo E., Motro, Yair, Moran-Gilad, Jacob
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Microbiology Society 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10210956/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37115199
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.001014
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author Bardenstein, Svetlana
Grupel, Daniel
Blum, Shlomo E.
Motro, Yair
Moran-Gilad, Jacob
author_facet Bardenstein, Svetlana
Grupel, Daniel
Blum, Shlomo E.
Motro, Yair
Moran-Gilad, Jacob
author_sort Bardenstein, Svetlana
collection PubMed
description Brucellosis is a worldwide zoonosis with important public health, animal health and economic implications. Brucella melitensis , commonly associated with small ruminants, is an emerging bovine pathogen in dairy farms. We analysed all B. melitensis outbreaks affecting dairy farms in Israel since 2006, combining traditional and genomic epidemiology to explore the public health implications of this One Health challenge. Whole-genome sequencing was applied to bovine and related human B. melitensis isolates from dairy farm outbreaks. cgMLST-based and SNP-based typing was integrated with epidemiological and investigation data. A secondary analysis combining the bovine-human isolates with endemic human isolates from southern Israel was performed. A total of 92 isolates from dairy cows and related human cases originating from 18 epidemiological clusters were analysed. Most genomic and epi-clusters were congruent, but sequencing showed relatedness between apparently unrelated farm outbreaks. Nine secondary human infections were also genomically confirmed. The bovine-human cohort appeared intermixed with 126 endemic human isolates in southern Israel. We show a persistent and widespread circulation of B. melitensis in dairy farms in Israel with secondary occupational human infection. The genomic epidemiology also uncovered cryptic connections between outbreaks. A regional connection between bovine and endemic human brucellosis cases points to a common reservoir, most probably local small ruminant herds. Control of humans and bovine brucellosis is inseparable. Epidemiological and microbiological surveillance and implementation of control measures across the entire range of farm animals is needed to mitigate this public health challenge.
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spelling pubmed-102109562023-05-26 Public and animal health risks associated with spillover of Brucella melitensis into dairy farms Bardenstein, Svetlana Grupel, Daniel Blum, Shlomo E. Motro, Yair Moran-Gilad, Jacob Microb Genom Research Articles Brucellosis is a worldwide zoonosis with important public health, animal health and economic implications. Brucella melitensis , commonly associated with small ruminants, is an emerging bovine pathogen in dairy farms. We analysed all B. melitensis outbreaks affecting dairy farms in Israel since 2006, combining traditional and genomic epidemiology to explore the public health implications of this One Health challenge. Whole-genome sequencing was applied to bovine and related human B. melitensis isolates from dairy farm outbreaks. cgMLST-based and SNP-based typing was integrated with epidemiological and investigation data. A secondary analysis combining the bovine-human isolates with endemic human isolates from southern Israel was performed. A total of 92 isolates from dairy cows and related human cases originating from 18 epidemiological clusters were analysed. Most genomic and epi-clusters were congruent, but sequencing showed relatedness between apparently unrelated farm outbreaks. Nine secondary human infections were also genomically confirmed. The bovine-human cohort appeared intermixed with 126 endemic human isolates in southern Israel. We show a persistent and widespread circulation of B. melitensis in dairy farms in Israel with secondary occupational human infection. The genomic epidemiology also uncovered cryptic connections between outbreaks. A regional connection between bovine and endemic human brucellosis cases points to a common reservoir, most probably local small ruminant herds. Control of humans and bovine brucellosis is inseparable. Epidemiological and microbiological surveillance and implementation of control measures across the entire range of farm animals is needed to mitigate this public health challenge. Microbiology Society 2023-04-28 /pmc/articles/PMC10210956/ /pubmed/37115199 http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.001014 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Bardenstein, Svetlana
Grupel, Daniel
Blum, Shlomo E.
Motro, Yair
Moran-Gilad, Jacob
Public and animal health risks associated with spillover of Brucella melitensis into dairy farms
title Public and animal health risks associated with spillover of Brucella melitensis into dairy farms
title_full Public and animal health risks associated with spillover of Brucella melitensis into dairy farms
title_fullStr Public and animal health risks associated with spillover of Brucella melitensis into dairy farms
title_full_unstemmed Public and animal health risks associated with spillover of Brucella melitensis into dairy farms
title_short Public and animal health risks associated with spillover of Brucella melitensis into dairy farms
title_sort public and animal health risks associated with spillover of brucella melitensis into dairy farms
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10210956/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37115199
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.001014
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