News arrow News arrow A novel genetic typing approach reveals focal transmission of the bacteria that cause Buruli ulcer

A novel genetic typing approach reveals focal transmission of the bacteria that cause Buruli ulcer
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28 July 2010

Buruli ulcer is an infectious disease afflicting thousands of children every year. The difficult-to-cure disease, which is caused by bacteria, occurs in tropical or subtropical climate zones and results in open sores and deformities. For the last two years, the international research consortium Stop Buruli has been collaborating in projects to research this forgotten and insidious disease.

28 July 2010: Basel, Switzerland; Melbourne, Australia; Legon, Ghana;A new study by members of the Stop Buruli consortium demonstrates the value of a novel genetic typing approach based on genome sequencing for studying the spread of Mycobacterium ulcerans, the causative agent of Buruli ulcer.

 

An international team of researchers at the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Switzerland, the Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, Ghana, and the University of Melbourne, Australia have used latest high throughput DNA sequencing technology and developed a new, highly discriminatory DNA typing method to complement traditional epidemiological information.

 

‘These results are leading to new insights into the mysterious mode of transmission behind Buruli ulcer, and will ultimately help to prevent the disease,’ said Professor Gerd Pluschke from the Swiss TPH. ‘Our findings confirm that Buruli ulcer is focally transmitted and suggest that improved case detection and early treatment combined with infection control interventions could reduce the spread of the disease.'

 

The findings, published July 20 in the open-access journal PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, show that bacterial strains from Buruli ulcer-endemic regions that were previously considered identical can in fact be distinguished from each other through detection of subtle differences in their genomic DNA sequences.

The developed genetic fingerprinting method allowed the researches to observe for the first time that M. ulcerans strains have a very focal pattern of distribution, suggesting that Buruli ulcer is not contracted by contact with contaminated water from the local rivers as previously thought.

 

The authors suggest that chronic Buruli ulcer lesions are a possible reservoir of M. ulcerans. While direct human-to-human transmission seems to be rare, M. ulcerans may spread from open Buruli ulcers into a currently unknown environmental reservoir, possibly insects. Subsequent infection of individuals living in the same settlements from this reservoir would explain the observed local clustering of genetic variants of the pathogen.

 

Further micro-epidemiological studies making use of this new DNA fingerprinting of isolates are now expected to help further unravel the enigma of M. ulcerans transmission. This could significantly contribute to the control of the disease.

 

 

About Buruli ulcer. The third most common mycobacterial disease, Buruli ulcer is a necrotizing skin disease that affects mostly children and youth in West Africa, but is also found in Australia, Asia and Latin America. The mode of transmission of M. ulcerans is poorly understood, in part because standard molecular typing methods lacked so far the resolution required for detailed micro-epidemiological analyses. Buruli ulcer is associated with slow-flowing rivers and swampy regions and it has been commonly assumed that transmission is associated with trauma of the skin followed by infection from a water-associated environmental source. 

 

Contact and further information

 

General information:  

 

Stop Buruli Communications
c/o UBS Optimus Foundation
Augustinerhof 1
Postfach
CH-8098 Zürich

 

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www.stopburuli.org

 

Specific information related to the research activities:  

 

Prof. Gerd Pluschke, PhD
Head Med. Parasitology / Infection Biology
Swiss Tropical & Public Health Institute
Socinstr. 57
CH 4002 Basel

 

Tel: + 41 61 284 82 35
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