PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Landscape and environmental influences on Mycobacterium ulcerans distribution among aquatic sites in Ghana.

  • Shannon M Pileggi,
  • Heather Jordan,
  • Julie A Clennon,
  • Ellen Whitney,
  • M Eric Benbow,
  • Richard Merritt,
  • Mollie McIntosh,
  • Ryan Kimbirauskas,
  • Pamela Small,
  • Daniel Boakye,
  • Charles Quaye,
  • Jiaguo Qi,
  • Lindsay Campbell,
  • Jenni Gronseth,
  • Edwin Ampadu,
  • William Opare,
  • Lance A Waller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176375
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
p. e0176375

Abstract

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Buruli ulcer, caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans, is highly endemic in West Africa. While the mode of transmission is unknown, many studies associate Buruli ulcer with different types of water exposure. We present results from the largest study to date to test for M. ulcerans in aquatic sites and identify environmental attributes associated with its presence. Environmental samples from 98 aquatic sites in the Greater Accra, Ashanti, and Volta regions of Ghana were tested for the presence of M. ulcerans DNA by polymerase chain reaction. The proportion of aquatic sites positive for M. ulcerans varied by region: Ashanti 66% (N = 39), Greater Accra 34% (N = 29), and Volta 0% (N = 30). We explored the spatial distribution of M. ulcerans positive and negative water bodies and found no significant clusters. We also determined both highly localized water attributes and broad scale remotely sensed land cover and terrain environmental characteristics associated with M. ulcerans presence through logistic regression. Our results concur with published results regarding conditions suitable for M. ulcerans growth and associations with Buruli ulcer disease burden with regards to water characteristics and disturbed environments, but differ from others with regards to spatial associations and topographic effects such as elevation and wetness. While our results suggest M. ulcerans is an environmental organism existing in a specific ecological niche, they also reveal variation in the elements defining this niche across the sites considered. In addition, despite the causal association between Buruli ulcer and M. ulcerans, we observed no significant statistical association between case reports of Buruli ulcer and presence of M. ulcerans in nearby waterbodies.