Nonhuman primates across sub-Saharan Africa are infected with the yaws bacterium Treponema pallidum subsp. pertenue

  • Sascha Knauf
  • , Jan F. Gogarten
  • , Verena J. Schuenemann
  • , Hélène M. De Nys
  • , Ariane Düx
  • , Michal Strouhal
  • , Lenka Mikalová
  • , Kirsten I. Bos
  • , Roy Armstrong
  • , Emmanuel K. Batamuzi
  • , Idrissa S. Chuma
  • , Bernard Davoust
  • , Georges Diatta
  • , Robert D. Fyumagwa
  • , Reuben R. Kazwala
  • , Julius D. Keyyu
  • , Inyasi A.V. Lejora
  • , Anthony Levasseur
  • , Hsi Liu
  • , Michael Mayhew
  • Oleg Mediannikov, Didier Raoult, Roman M. Wittig, Christian Roos, Fabian H. Leendertz, David Smajs, Kay Nieselt, Johannes Krause, Sébastien Calvignac-Spencer

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Articlepeer-review

Abstract

Dear Editor, The bacterium Treponema pallidum (TP) causes human syphilis (subsp. pallidum; TPA), bejel (subsp. endemicum; TEN), and yaws (subsp. pertenue; TPE) (1). Although syphilis has reached a worldwide distribution (2), bejel and yaws have remained endemic diseases. Bejel affects individuals in dry areas of Sahelian Africa and Saudi Arabia, whereas yaws affects those living in the humid tropics (1). Yaws is currently reported as endemic in 14 countries, and an additional 84 countries have a known history of yaws but lack recent epidemiological data (3,4). Although this disease was subject to global eradication efforts in the mid-20th century, it later reemerged in West Africa, Southern Asia, and the Pacific region (5). New large-scale treatment options triggered the ongoing second eradication campaign, the goal of which is to eradicate yaws globally by 2020 (5). References: (1) Giacani, L. & Lukehart, S.A. The endemic treponematoses. Clin. Microbiol. Rev. 27, 89–115 (2014). (2) Arora, N. et al. Origin of modern syphilis and emergence of a pandemic Treponema pallidum cluster. Nat. Microbiol. 2, 16245 (2016). (3) Marks, M. Yaws: towards the WHO eradication target. Trans. R Soc. Trop. Med. Hyg. 110, 319–320 (2016). (4) World Health Organization. Eradication of yaws: procedures for verification and certification of interruption of transmission (World Health Organization, Geneva, 2018). (5) Asiedu, K., Fitzpatrick, C. & Jannin, J. Eradication of yaws: historical efforts and achieving WHO’s 2020 target. PLoS Negl. Trop. Dis. 8, e3016 (2014).
Original languageEnglish
JournalEmerging Microbes and Infections
Volume7
Early online date19 Sept 2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 Feb 2019

Keywords

  • immunology
  • epidemiology
  • microbiology
  • drug discovery
  • parasitology
  • virology
  • infectious diseases

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