2008
DOI: 10.1099/mic.0.2007/016154-0
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Long-term persistence of virulent Yersinia pestis in soil

Abstract: Plague is characterized by geographical foci from which it re-emerges after decades of silence, a fact currently explained by enzootic and epizootic cycles between plague-susceptible and plagueresistant rodents. To assess the potential role of soil in plague epidemiology, we experimentally investigated whether Yersinia pestis could persist alive and virulent in soil. Sterilized soil inoculated with virulent Y. pestis biotype Orientalis was regularly sampled for 40 weeks in duplicate. Each sample was observed b… Show more

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Cited by 104 publications
(87 citation statements)
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“…[9][10][11][12][13][14][15] Plague bacteria also may survive outside living hosts on carcasses or in the soil, but only limited evidence exists to suggest that such mechanisms are important for long-term survival in nature. 9,16,17 Plague likely evolved in Asia, 9,18,19 and has since spread broadly by various means, 18 including the transport of infected hosts and fleas along overland trade routes or aboard rat-infested ships during the three historically documented pandemics. The third of these pandemics and that most relevant to this study introduced plague to North American ports in the late nineteenth century; where it afterwards "escaped" into native rodent populations, eventually spreading east through the Rocky Mountains to the western edge of the Great Plains.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[9][10][11][12][13][14][15] Plague bacteria also may survive outside living hosts on carcasses or in the soil, but only limited evidence exists to suggest that such mechanisms are important for long-term survival in nature. 9,16,17 Plague likely evolved in Asia, 9,18,19 and has since spread broadly by various means, 18 including the transport of infected hosts and fleas along overland trade routes or aboard rat-infested ships during the three historically documented pandemics. The third of these pandemics and that most relevant to this study introduced plague to North American ports in the late nineteenth century; where it afterwards "escaped" into native rodent populations, eventually spreading east through the Rocky Mountains to the western edge of the Great Plains.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some literature indicates that plague persistence in natural foci has a root cause in soils (Breneva et al, 2006;Eisen et al, 2008). This indication has been supported by the evidence that Y. pestis can survive in natural soil conditions from 24 days to 40 weeks (Ayyadurai et al, 2008). Additionally, there is a long standing hypothesis linking enzootic and epizootic plague cycles with soil micro-organisms like amoeba and soil organic matter (Anisimov, 2002) which come in contact with burrowing rodents.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 64%
“…Low overall rates of plague exposure during and preceding epizootics among rodent (Stapp et al 2008) and nonrodent (Brinkerhoff et al 2009) mammalian species point to a nonmammalian source of Y. pestis infection to prairie dogs. Recent demonstrations of Y. pestis persistence in soils (Ayyadurai et al 2008, Eisen et al 2008b indicate that a mammalian reservoir may not be required for epizootic initiation, although it has not been demonstrated that soils contaminated with Y. pestis can initiate epizootic events in prairie dogs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%