Genomic history of the seventh pandemic of cholera in Africa
Author(s) -
FrançoisXavier Weill,
Daryl Domman,
Elisabeth Njamkepo,
Cheryl L. Tarr,
Jean Rauzier,
Nizar Fawal,
Karen H. Keddy,
Henrik Salje,
Sandra Moore,
Asish K. Mukhopadhyay,
Raymond Bercion,
Francisco J. Luquero,
Antoinette Ngandjio,
Mireille Dosso,
E. V. Monakhova,
Benoît Garin,
Christiane Bouchier,
Carlo Pazzani,
Ankur Mutreja,
Roland Grunow,
Fati Sidikou,
Laurence Bonte,
Sébastien Breurec,
Maria Damian,
Berthe-Marie Njanpop-Lafourcade,
Guillaume Sapriel,
AnneLaure Page,
Monzer Hamzé,
Myriam Henkens,
Goutam Chowdhury,
Martin Mengel,
J.-L. Koeck,
Jean-Michel Fournier,
Gordon Dougan,
Patrick A. D. Grimont,
Julian Parkhill,
Kathryn E. Holt,
Renaud Piarroux,
Thandavarayan Ramamurthy,
Marie-Laure Quilici,
Nicholas R. Thomson
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.aad5901
Subject(s) - cholera , pandemic , geography , covid-19 , biology , virology , medicine , infectious disease (medical specialty) , disease , pathology
The seventh cholera pandemic has heavily affected Africa, although the origin and continental spread of the disease remain undefined. We used genomic data from 1070 Vibrio cholerae O1 isolates, across 45 African countries and over a 49-year period, to show that past epidemics were attributable to a single expanded lineage. This lineage was introduced at least 11 times since 1970, into two main regions, West Africa and East/Southern Africa, causing epidemics that lasted up to 28 years. The last five introductions into Africa, all from Asia, involved multidrug-resistant sublineages that replaced antibiotic-susceptible sublineages after 2000. This phylogenetic framework describes the periodicity of lineage introduction and the stable routes of cholera spread, which should inform the rational design of control measures for cholera in Africa.
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