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Exposure of pelagic seabirds to Toxoplasma gondii in the Western Indian Ocean points to an open sea dispersal of this terrestrial parasite

Toxoplasma gondii is a protozoan parasite that uses felids as definitive hosts and warm-blooded animals as intermediate hosts. While the dispersal of T. gondii infectious oocysts from land to coastal waters has been well documented, transmission routes to pelagic species remain puzzling. We used the...

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Autores principales: Poulle, Marie-Lazarine, Le Corre, Matthieu, Bastien, Matthieu, Gedda, Elsa, Feare, Chris, Jaeger, Audrey, Larose, Christine, Shah, Nirmal, Voogt, Nina, Göpper, Byron, Lagadec, Erwan, Rocamora, Gérard, Geers, Régine, Aubert, Dominique, Villena, Isabelle, Lebarbenchon, Camille
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8372946/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34407103
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255664
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author Poulle, Marie-Lazarine
Le Corre, Matthieu
Bastien, Matthieu
Gedda, Elsa
Feare, Chris
Jaeger, Audrey
Larose, Christine
Shah, Nirmal
Voogt, Nina
Göpper, Byron
Lagadec, Erwan
Rocamora, Gérard
Geers, Régine
Aubert, Dominique
Villena, Isabelle
Lebarbenchon, Camille
author_facet Poulle, Marie-Lazarine
Le Corre, Matthieu
Bastien, Matthieu
Gedda, Elsa
Feare, Chris
Jaeger, Audrey
Larose, Christine
Shah, Nirmal
Voogt, Nina
Göpper, Byron
Lagadec, Erwan
Rocamora, Gérard
Geers, Régine
Aubert, Dominique
Villena, Isabelle
Lebarbenchon, Camille
author_sort Poulle, Marie-Lazarine
collection PubMed
description Toxoplasma gondii is a protozoan parasite that uses felids as definitive hosts and warm-blooded animals as intermediate hosts. While the dispersal of T. gondii infectious oocysts from land to coastal waters has been well documented, transmission routes to pelagic species remain puzzling. We used the modified agglutination test (MAT titre ≥ 10) to detect antibodies against T. gondii in sera collected from 1014 pelagic seabirds belonging to 10 species. Sampling was carried out on eight islands of the Western Indian Ocean: Reunion and Juan de Nova (colonized by cats), Cousin, Cousine, Aride, Bird, Europa and Tromelin islands (cat-free). Antibodies against T. gondii were found in all islands and all species but the great frigatebird. The overall seroprevalence was 16.8% [95% CI: 14.5%-19.1%] but significantly varied according to species, islands and age-classes. The low antibody levels (MAT titres = 10 or 25) detected in one shearwater and three red-footed booby chicks most likely resulted from maternal antibody transfer. In adults, exposure to soils contaminated by locally deposited oocysts may explain the detection of antibodies in both wedge-tailed shearwaters on Reunion Island and sooty terns on Juan de Nova. However, 144 adults breeding on cat-free islands also tested positive. In the Seychelles, there was a significant decrease in T. gondii prevalence associated with greater distances to cat populations for species that sometimes rest on the shore, i.e. terns and noddies. This suggests that oocysts carried by marine currents could be deposited on shore tens of kilometres from their initial deposition point and that the number of deposited oocysts decreases with distance from the nearest cat population. The consumption of fishes from the families Mullidae, Carangidae, Clupeidae and Engraulidae, previously described as T. gondii oocyst-carriers (i.e. paratenic hosts), could also explain the exposure of terns, noddies, boobies and tropicbirds to T. gondii. Our detection of antibodies against T. gondii in seabirds that fish in the high sea, have no contact with locally contaminated soils but frequent the shores and/or consume paratenic hosts supports the hypothesis of an open-sea dispersal of T. gondii oocysts by oceanic currents and/or fish.
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spelling pubmed-83729462021-08-19 Exposure of pelagic seabirds to Toxoplasma gondii in the Western Indian Ocean points to an open sea dispersal of this terrestrial parasite Poulle, Marie-Lazarine Le Corre, Matthieu Bastien, Matthieu Gedda, Elsa Feare, Chris Jaeger, Audrey Larose, Christine Shah, Nirmal Voogt, Nina Göpper, Byron Lagadec, Erwan Rocamora, Gérard Geers, Régine Aubert, Dominique Villena, Isabelle Lebarbenchon, Camille PLoS One Research Article Toxoplasma gondii is a protozoan parasite that uses felids as definitive hosts and warm-blooded animals as intermediate hosts. While the dispersal of T. gondii infectious oocysts from land to coastal waters has been well documented, transmission routes to pelagic species remain puzzling. We used the modified agglutination test (MAT titre ≥ 10) to detect antibodies against T. gondii in sera collected from 1014 pelagic seabirds belonging to 10 species. Sampling was carried out on eight islands of the Western Indian Ocean: Reunion and Juan de Nova (colonized by cats), Cousin, Cousine, Aride, Bird, Europa and Tromelin islands (cat-free). Antibodies against T. gondii were found in all islands and all species but the great frigatebird. The overall seroprevalence was 16.8% [95% CI: 14.5%-19.1%] but significantly varied according to species, islands and age-classes. The low antibody levels (MAT titres = 10 or 25) detected in one shearwater and three red-footed booby chicks most likely resulted from maternal antibody transfer. In adults, exposure to soils contaminated by locally deposited oocysts may explain the detection of antibodies in both wedge-tailed shearwaters on Reunion Island and sooty terns on Juan de Nova. However, 144 adults breeding on cat-free islands also tested positive. In the Seychelles, there was a significant decrease in T. gondii prevalence associated with greater distances to cat populations for species that sometimes rest on the shore, i.e. terns and noddies. This suggests that oocysts carried by marine currents could be deposited on shore tens of kilometres from their initial deposition point and that the number of deposited oocysts decreases with distance from the nearest cat population. The consumption of fishes from the families Mullidae, Carangidae, Clupeidae and Engraulidae, previously described as T. gondii oocyst-carriers (i.e. paratenic hosts), could also explain the exposure of terns, noddies, boobies and tropicbirds to T. gondii. Our detection of antibodies against T. gondii in seabirds that fish in the high sea, have no contact with locally contaminated soils but frequent the shores and/or consume paratenic hosts supports the hypothesis of an open-sea dispersal of T. gondii oocysts by oceanic currents and/or fish. Public Library of Science 2021-08-18 /pmc/articles/PMC8372946/ /pubmed/34407103 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255664 Text en © 2021 Poulle et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Poulle, Marie-Lazarine
Le Corre, Matthieu
Bastien, Matthieu
Gedda, Elsa
Feare, Chris
Jaeger, Audrey
Larose, Christine
Shah, Nirmal
Voogt, Nina
Göpper, Byron
Lagadec, Erwan
Rocamora, Gérard
Geers, Régine
Aubert, Dominique
Villena, Isabelle
Lebarbenchon, Camille
Exposure of pelagic seabirds to Toxoplasma gondii in the Western Indian Ocean points to an open sea dispersal of this terrestrial parasite
title Exposure of pelagic seabirds to Toxoplasma gondii in the Western Indian Ocean points to an open sea dispersal of this terrestrial parasite
title_full Exposure of pelagic seabirds to Toxoplasma gondii in the Western Indian Ocean points to an open sea dispersal of this terrestrial parasite
title_fullStr Exposure of pelagic seabirds to Toxoplasma gondii in the Western Indian Ocean points to an open sea dispersal of this terrestrial parasite
title_full_unstemmed Exposure of pelagic seabirds to Toxoplasma gondii in the Western Indian Ocean points to an open sea dispersal of this terrestrial parasite
title_short Exposure of pelagic seabirds to Toxoplasma gondii in the Western Indian Ocean points to an open sea dispersal of this terrestrial parasite
title_sort exposure of pelagic seabirds to toxoplasma gondii in the western indian ocean points to an open sea dispersal of this terrestrial parasite
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8372946/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34407103
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255664
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