<i>Yersinia pestis</i> Strains of the 1.ORI Line as Etiological Agent of the Plague Pandemic III
-
Published:2022-10-29
Issue:3
Volume:
Page:23-37
-
ISSN:2658-719X
-
Container-title:Problems of Particularly Dangerous Infections
-
language:
-
Short-container-title:Problemy Osobo Opasnykh Infektsii
Affiliation:
1. Russian Research Anti-Plague Institute “Microbe”
Abstract
Yersinia pestis strains of the 1.ORI lineage originate from China as a result of evolution of the 1.ANT phylogenetic branch. Strains of the biovar orientalis are divided into three major lines of evolution: 1.ORI1, 1.ORI2, 1.ORI3. Lines 1.ORI1 and 1.ORI2 originated in China and then spread across the east and west coasts of India, respectively. Strains of the biovar orientalis have widely spread throughout the world, mainly as a result of introduction by sea. This way, the 1.ORI1 line was imported onto the territory of North America. 1.ORI2 line has spread to Southeast Asia, Africa, Europe, and South America. In addition, the strains of the biovar orientalis were brought to the territory of Australia, however, the formation of natural foci did not occur. The spread of strains to new territories during the third plague pandemic, as a rule, took place with the participation of one strain, which caused epizootics among synanthropic rodents. After that, outbreaks were recorded among the population of port cities, followed by drifting into the countryside and the formation of natural foci under suitable natural conditions. In the absence of such, the plague pathogen was eliminated from natural biotopes, and the formation of a natural focus did not occur. In recent decades, most cases of human plague in the world have been caused by strains of the biovar orientalis (1.ORI). However, the emergence and spread of the evolutionary line “1” is insufficiently studied. Currently, there is a lack of both historical data and strains that are ancestors of modern strains in many countries to clarify the details of the irradiation of strains of the biovar orientalis. As a result, the concepts of dissemination of many evolution branches of the strains, biovar orientalis are in the form of hypotheses to date. In this work, the collection and analysis of literature data on the history and epidemiology of plague over the third pandemic, a search for a connection between epidemic manifestations and the appurtenance of the strains that caused them to certain phylogenetic lineages was carried out.
Publisher
Russian Research Anti-Plague Institute Microbe
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Immunology,Microbiology,Epidemiology
Reference58 articles.
1. Onishchenko G.G., Kutyrev V.V., editors. [Natural Plague Foci in the Territory of Caucasus, Caspian Sea Region, Central Asia and Siberia]. Moscow: “Medicine”; 2004. 192 p. 2. Achtman M., Zurth K., Morelli G., Torrea G., Guiyoule A., Carniel E. Yersinia pestis, the cause of plague, is a recently emerged clone of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA. 1999; 96(24):14043–8. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.96.24.14043. 3. Kutyrev V.V., Eroshenko G.A., Motin V.L., Nosov N.Y., Krasnov J.M., Kukleva L.M., Nikiforov K.A., Al’khova Z.V., Oglodin E.G., Guseva N.P. Phylogeny and classification of Yersinia pestis through the lens of strains from the plague foci of Commonwealth of Independent States. Front. Microbiol. 2018; 9:1106. DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.01106. 4. Bos K.I., Schuenemann V.J., Golding G.B., Burbano H.A., Waglechner N., Coombes B.K., McPhee J.B., DeWitte S.N., Meyer M., Schmedes S., Wood J., Earn D.J., Herring D.A., Bauer P., Poinar H.N., Krause J. A draft genome of Yersinia pestis from victims of the Black death. Nature. 2011; 478:506–10. DOI: 10.1038/nature10549. 5. Wagner D.M., Klunk J., Harbeck M., Devault A., Waglechner N., Sahl J.W., Enk J., Birdsell D.N., Kuch M., Lumibao C., Poinar D., Pearson T., Fourment M., Golding B., Riehm J.M., Earn D.J., Dewitte S., Rouillard J.M., Grupe G., Wiechmann I., Bliska J.B., Keim P.S., Scholz H.C., Holmes E.C., Poinar H. Yersinia pestis and the plague of Justinian 541–543 AD: a genomic analysis. Lancet Infect. Dis. 2014; 14(4):319–26. DOI: 10.1016/S1473-3099(13)70323-2.
|
|