Circulation of Salmonella spp. between humans, animals and the environment in animal-owning households in Malawi
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Abstract
Diverse salmonellae have the potential to cause disease and may be carried asymptomatically within the intestine of many vertebrate species. The relative contribution of human, animal, and environmental hosts to the transmission of Salmonella is unknown within and between households in low-income settings, especially where humans and animals may live in close contact and sanitary infrastructure is often inadequate. Between November 2018 and December 2019, we isolated Salmonella spp. from thirty households in urban and rural locations in Malawi, sampling at three time points from the stool of humans, animals, and their household environment. Using whole genome sequencing and fine-resolution bioinformatic and phylogenetic analyses we found evidence of sharing of Salmonella species and strains between humans, animals and the environment, both within and between households. The intricate web of interconnected salmonellae within this ecosystem underscores the importance of adopting a multi-faceted ‘One Health’ strategy when considering control of Salmonella in low-intensity agricultural systems.
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Acknowledgements: We would like to thank the households recruited to this study for their participation in the sample collection. This work has been supported by a Wellcome Trust Clinical Fellowship award to Catherine N. Wilson, grant number 203919/Z/16/Z. M.A.B. and N.R.T. were supported by Wellcome Funding to the Sanger Institute (#206194). N.R.T., M.A.B., P.M. and C.N.W. were also supported by Wellcome Funding to the Sanger Institute (220540/Z/20/A) during the course of this work.
Funder: Wellcome Trust Clinical PhD Fellowship 203919/Z/16/Z Wellcome Trust funding to the Sanger Institute 108413/A/15/D
Funder: Wellcome Trust funding to the Sanger Institute 108413/A/15/D Wellcome Trust funding to the Sanger Institute #206194

