Diverse lineages of pathogenic Leptospira species are widespread in the environment in Puerto Rico, USA

Casanovas-Massana, Arnau and Stone, Nathan E. and Hall, Carina M. and Ortiz, Marielisa and Hutton, Shelby M. and Santana-Propper, Ella and Celona, Kimberly R. and Williamson, Charles H. D. and Bratsch, Nicole and Fernandes, Luis G. V. and Busch, Joseph D. and Pearson, Talima and Rivera-Garcia, Sarai and Soltero, Fred and Galloway, Renee and Sahl, Jason W. and Nally, Jarlath E. and Wagner, David M. (2022) Diverse lineages of pathogenic Leptospira species are widespread in the environment in Puerto Rico, USA. PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 16 (5). e0009959. ISSN 1935-2735

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Abstract

Leptospirosis, caused by Leptospira bacteria, is a common zoonosis worldwide, especially in the tropics. Reservoir species and risk factors have been identified but surveys for environmental sources are rare. Furthermore, understanding of environmental Leptospira containing virulence associated genes and possibly capable of causing disease is incomplete, which may convolute leptospirosis diagnosis, prevention, and epidemiology.

Methodology/Principal findings
We collected environmental samples from 22 sites in Puerto Rico during three sampling periods over 14-months (Dec 2018-Feb 2020); 10 water and 10 soil samples were collected at each site. Samples were screened for DNA from potentially pathogenic Leptospira using the lipL32 PCR assay and positive samples were sequenced to assess genetic diversity. One urban site in San Juan was sampled three times over 14 months to assess persistence in soil; live leptospires were obtained during the last sampling period. Isolates were whole genome sequenced and LipL32 expression was assessed in vitro.

We detected pathogenic Leptospira DNA at 15/22 sites; both soil and water were positive at 5/15 sites. We recovered lipL32 sequences from 83/86 positive samples (15/15 positive sites) and secY sequences from 32/86 (10/15 sites); multiple genotypes were identified at 12 sites. These sequences revealed significant diversity across samples, including four novel lipL32 phylogenetic clades within the pathogenic P1 group. Most samples from the serially sampled site were lipL32 positive at each time point. We sequenced the genomes of six saprophytic and two pathogenic Leptospira isolates; the latter represent a novel pathogenic Leptospira species likely belonging to a new serogroup.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: ArticleGate > Medical Science
Depositing User: APLOS Lib
Date Deposited: 20 Jul 2022 12:03
Last Modified: 20 Jul 2022 12:03
URI: http://ebooks.pubstmlibrary.com/id/eprint/447

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