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Molecular epidemiology of bovine tuberculosis in Northern Ghana identifies several uncharacterized bovine spoligotypes and suggests possible zoonotic transmission

Acquah, SEK; Asare, P; Danso, EK; Tetteh, P; Tetteh, AY; Boateng, D; Osei-Wusu, S; Afum, T; Ayamdooh, YI; Akugre, EA; Samad, OA; Quaye, L; Obiri-Danso, K; Kock, R; Asante-Poku, A; Yeboah-Manu, D

Authors

SEK Acquah

P Asare

EK Danso

P Tetteh

AY Tetteh

D Boateng

S Osei-Wusu

T Afum

YI Ayamdooh

EA Akugre

OA Samad

L Quaye

K Obiri-Danso

R Kock

A Asante-Poku

D Yeboah-Manu



Abstract

Objective We conducted an abattoir-based cross-sectional study in the five administrative regions of Northern Ghana to determine the distribution of bovine tuberculosis (BTB) among slaughtered carcasses and identify the possibility of zoonotic transmission. Methods Direct smear microscopy was done on 438 tuberculosis-like lesions from selected cattle organs and cultured on Lowenstein-Jensen media. Acid-fast bacilli (AFB) isolates were confirmed as members of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) by PCR amplification of IS6110 and rpo beta. Characterization and assignment into MTBC lineage and sub-lineage were done by spoligotyping, with the aid of the SITVIT2, miruvntrplus and mbovis.org databases. Spoligotype data was compared to that of clinical M. bovis isolates from the same regions to identify similarities. Results A total of 319/438 (72.8%) lesion homogenates were smear positive out of which, 84.6% (270/319) had microscopic grade of at least 1+ for AFB. Two hundred and sixty-five samples (265/438; 60.5%) were culture positive, of which 212 (80.0%) were MTBC. Approximately 16.7% (34/203) of the isolates with correctly defined spoligotypes were negative for IS6110 PCR but were confirmed by rpo beta. Spoligotyping characterized 203 isolates as M. bovis (198, 97.5%), M. caprae (3, 1.5%), M. tuberculosis (Mtbss) lineage (L) 4 Cameroon sub-lineage, (1, 0.5%), and M. africanum (Maf) L6 (1, 0.5%). A total of 53 unique spoligotype patterns were identified across the five administrative regions (33 and 28 were identified as orphan respectively by the SITVIT2 and mbovis.org databases), with the most dominant spoligotype being SIT1037/ SB0944 (77/203, 37.93%). Analysis of the bovine and human M. bovis isolates showed 75% (3/4) human M. bovis isolates sharing the same spoligotype pattern with the bovine isolates. Conclusion Our study identified that approximately 29% of M. bovis strains causing BTB in Northern Ghana are caused by uncharacterized spoligotypes. Our findings suggest possible zoonotic transmission and highlight the need for BTB disease control in Northern Ghana.

Citation

Acquah, S., Asare, P., Danso, E., Tetteh, P., Tetteh, A., Boateng, D., …Yeboah-Manu, D. (2022). Molecular epidemiology of bovine tuberculosis in Northern Ghana identifies several uncharacterized bovine spoligotypes and suggests possible zoonotic transmission. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 16(8), https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0010649

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 9, 2022
Online Publication Date Aug 11, 2022
Publication Date 2022
Deposit Date Aug 23, 2023
Publicly Available Date Aug 23, 2023
Print ISSN 1935-2727
Publisher Public Library of Science
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 16
Issue 8
DOI https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0010649
Keywords MYCOBACTERIUM-TUBERCULOSIS; CLONAL COMPLEX; CATTLE; DIAGNOSIS; ABATTOIR; PREVALENCE; INFECTION; PULMONARY; TANZANIA; SEQUENCE

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