Fine-scale prevalence and genetic diversity of urban small mammal-borne pathogenic Leptospira in Africa: A spatiotemporal survey within Cotonou, Benin
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Abstract
Leptospirosis is a zoonotic disease that is caused by spirochete bacteria of the genus
Leptospira. Around the world, one million people each year are infected, leading to
60,000 deaths. Infection occurs through contact with environmental pathogens excreted
by mammals (notably rodents). Data on Leptospira and leptospirosis in Africa
are rather scarce, especially in urban habitats though these appear to be favourable
environments for the pathogen circulation and human contamination. Using
qPCR, DNA sequencing as well as MST/VNTR approaches, we examined Leptospira
occurrence and genetic diversity in 779 commensal small mammals that were sampled
over 2 years in the city centre of Cotonou, Benin, from three neighbourhoods
with contrasting socio-environmental
conditions. Overall prevalence reached 9.1%.
However, very marked variations in both space and time were observed, with local
peaks of high prevalence but no clear seasonal pattern. In most sites that could be
regularly sampled, Leptospira-positive
rodents were found at least once, thus confirming
the widespread circulation of the pathogen within small mammal communities of
Cotonou. Interestingly, an unusual diversity of small mammal-borne
Leptospira species
and genotypes was retrieved, with up to four species and three different genovars
within the same neighbourhood, and even instances of two species and two genovars
identified simultaneously within the same household. To our knowledge, such a high
genetic diversity has never been described at such a fine scale, a fortiori in Africa and,
more generally, within an urban environment. Altogether, our results underline that
much remains unknown about leptospirosis as well as the associated infectious risk in
African cities where the disease may be massively over-looked.
