Title: Research interests
1Research interests
- Freshwater microbial ecology
- Community structure/biogeochemical cycling
- Natural attenuation in deep aquifers
- Distribution of antibiotic resistance, genetic
elements (plasmids, transposons, IS elements) - Survival and behaviour of bacterial pathogens in
large catchments
2Bacterial pathogens
- Survival of pathogens in freshwater and deep
sediments (Windermere/coliforms) - culture 37 years/Molecular signal 6000 years
- Source tracking E. coli in river Tamar
- Distinguish human from ovine/bovine from birds
- Distribution of
- antibiotic resistance in lakes and upland tarns
- Tetr determinants and plasmids in fish farm and
hospital environments across Europe - Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis
in large catchments
3Today
- Background on bacterial pathogens in the
environment - Example of a animal pathogen with a potential
human link - Using it as an example of how bacterial pathogen
can be studied in large scale catchments
4Why are bacterial pathogens difficult to study?
- Variable numbers
- Sampling issues (sample heterogeneity)
- Natural environments are invariably nutrient
limited - Populations of micro-organisms are largely black
boxes - Source tracking/identification
- Culturability
5The culturability problem
- Cfu underestimate numbers of prokaryotes - only
0.1 to 10 organisms present can be cultured - Viable but non-culturable cells (mainly
pathogens) - Possible reasons
- Substrate accelerated death
- Oxidative killing
- Laboratory media are selective
- In vitro conditions different to in vivo
- Culture methods detect microbial weeds?
6From yesterday
- Noted that the environment is a transport
mechanism for disease - from farm to fork
- from crap to tap (this presentation)
- Noted that disease places an economic burden
(e.g. on NHS)
7Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis
(MAP) and its distribution in catchments
MAP causes Johnes Disease MAP is excreted into
the environment by diseased animals in very large
numbers MAP implicated as cause of Crohns
Disease and IBS (humans) - controversial
8Broad species pathogenicity of MAP
- Domestic wild ruminants
- Deer, Alpaca, Horses
- Pigs Dogs
- Rabbits their predators
- Chickens carrion birds
- Primates (recognised in 4 out of 5.but not
humans)
9Link between Map and Crohns disease
- No consensus on aetiological link
- MAP reported in Crohns tissue- 0 to 93
- Johnes disease incidence increasing in the UK
- CD rising (particularly in children
Europe-wide) - RECENT DEFRA STUDY NO LINK
10DEFRA study interpretation
- Two alternative explanations
- No causal link
- Causal link but study design unable to detect
effect - Possible reasons
- MAP ubiquitous in the environment
- other exposure routes not taken into account
- Direct contact with animals
- Milk and dairy products
- Water (river, potable, aerosols)
11Live MAP in retail pasteurised milk
- Irish Republic - IS900 PCR 9.8 culture no
- OReilly et al. Appl Env Microbiol
2004705138-44 - USA- culture 2.8
yes - Ellingson et al. J Food Protect 2005 in press
- Czech Republic - culture 2
yes - Ayele et al. Appl Env Microbiol 2005711210-14
- Argentina - culture 5.7
yes - Cirone et al. abstr 2004
12- Water (river, potable, aerosols)
Environmental studies on waterborne transmission
of Mycobacterium avium subspecies
paratuberculosis (MAP) from animals to humans in
South Wales
Centre for Ecology and Hydrology St
Georges Hospital Medical School
13Basis of the project
- MAP is implicated in Crohns disease
- We can define some of the environmental sources
of MAP - Infection may have an environmental route
- Bacterial pathogens survive in the environment
- Possible to track difficult-to- culture MAP in
the environment using PCR (IS900) and culture
14Hypotheses
- MAP is present in the rivers Taff and Towy in
planktonic form and within biofilm communities
and protozoa - MAP is present in the holding reservoir for
domestic water supplies abstracted from the Towy - The profile of MAP detection in sedimentary cores
will demonstrate co-emergence with
industrialisation and intensive farming
15Study areas
- River Taff and catchment (South Wales, UK)
- River Towy and catchment (South Wales, UK)
- Several Lake District catchments (N. England, UK)
- Windermere catchment (in detail)
16Catchment 1
- River Taff, South Wales, UK
17R. Taff catchment
- The Taff is a spate river running off the hills
and through the principal city of Cardiff - Cardiff
- a highly populated coastal region
- lies beneath hill pastures
- grazed by livestock
- Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis
is endemic - published distribution of CD patients
(association with river) - Sampled
- Taff water above Cardiff twice weekly from
November 2001 to November 2002 (urban area) - higher catchment and reservoirs (bottom sediment
and cores)
18River Taff and catchment
Applied and Environmental Microbiology (2005) 71
2130-2139
19Sampling water
20Interpretation of PCR data
- Positive PCR
- Unequivocally IS900
- Product identified
- by size then sequencing and defined against IS900
sequence - Negative PCR
- Not necessarily negative
- Inhibition of PCR (humic acid etc)
- Patchiness of sampling
- PCR may underestimate the presence of MAP in the
environment
21Presence of IS900 in R. Taff from Nov 01 to Nov
02
22Sediment (upper Taff catchment)
23Vertical of MAP distribution in sediments
- Several cores showed MAP below the surface
showing that it has a historical deposition
record - Pontiscillin- gt20 years
- Llwyn-on - gt 40 years
30 cm
24Distribution of Crohns patients in Cardiff
(Wales) associated with river MAP present in R.
Taff consistently (32 samples in 1
year) Distributed throughout the
catchment historically deposited
(gt40years) Presence significantly associated
with rainfall Presence could not be predicted
from rainfall, river flow or river height (not
significant but close) Parallel studies showed
that MAP culturable in lake water microcosms
for 632 days and detectable gt841 days
25 R. Taff study
- Previous epidemiological research in Cardiff
demonstrated a highly significant increase of
Crohns disease in 11 districts -
- These bordered the river except for a gap on the
windward side - A topographical relief map shows that this gap is
directly opposite a valley open to the prevailing
south-westerly winds - This would influence the distribution of aerosols
carrying M. avium subspecies paratuberculosis
from the river
26(No Transcript)
27Catchment 2
- River Towy, South Wales, UK
28River Towy catchment
- The Towy is a spate river running off the hills
and through Carmarthen - Towy provides water for abstraction and public
supply - Catchment
- comprises hill pastures, grazed by livestock
- MAP is endemic
- Sampled
- Towy water above Nantgaredig twice weekly from
August 2002 to April 2003 (rural area) - Higher catchment and reservoirs (bottom sediment
and cores)
29River Towy and catchment
30R. Towy/water distribution river (site 9 twice
weekly sampling)
?
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32R. Towy study
- River Towy (S. Wales, UK) showed
- Of the 70 sample dates (all data included),
IS900 was present on 48 occasions (69 cf Taff
32) - A significant association between MAP and river
hydrography - Its presence was entirely predictable based on
rainfall or river flow data
33R. Towy study
- River height/flow higher average heights and
flows were significantly associated with the
presence of IS900 compared to lower values when
IS900 was absent - Using a threshold flow of 3.4 m3s-1, river flow
in the Towy could predict the presence of IS900
(cf Cardiff) - Presence of IS900 (MAP) is associated with rain
falling up to 7 days before sample date
Applied and Environmental Microbiology 72, 4067-
4077
34R. Towy study
-
- Clustering in time (significant at the 1 level)
was demonstrated - Furthermore, clustering showed MAP was present
continuously as prolonged pulses (sometimes
several weeks) influenced by rainfall up to 8
days prior to sampling - The presence of MAP is predictable in the River
Towy
Applied and Environmental Microbiology 72, 40677-
4077
35R. Towy water abstraction/purification (Cocodaf)
plant
36R. Towy/water distribution/abstraction point
?
37Pipeline (27km)
?
11
12b?
12a
12c
13 ?
12d?
38Pipeline (27km)
11
Towy Pumping station
12b?
?
12a
12c
13 ?
12d?
39Pipeline (27km)
11
Towy Pumping station
12b?
12a
?
12c
13 ?
12d?
40(No Transcript)
41Catchment 3
- English Lake District, Cumbria, UK
42English Lake District 14 major lakes gt500 tarns
43Applied and Environmental Microbiology
(submitted)
44Lake District
- MAP was shown to be present
- in the tarns and lakes in the high and low fells
- in quaternary treated sewage effluent discharged
into rivers - within river and lake sediments (core data),
deposited continuously since 1950 or before
(possible)
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
(submitted)
45Summary MAP in the freshwater catchments
- MAP is widely distributed in 3 large catchment
areas - Presence in rivers influenced by hydrography and
rainfall - Possible exit via aerosols
- High survival potential in freshwater
- (gt3 years in lab system)
- Historical deposition record in sediments
- Reduced numbers in water treatment but not
eliminated - found in water tanks supplied with
potable/treated water
46Summary MAP in the freshwater catchments
- Implied association with sediment
- requires sediment attachment for persistence/not
found in non-sediment areas - Biofilm association
- found in environmental biofilm (internal
association not determined) - long-term association with Acanthamoeba polyphage
- Mura, Bull, Evans, Sidi-Boumedine, McMinn,
Rhodes, Pickup, Hermon-Taylor. AEM submitted
47(No Transcript)
48Countryside Survey of Great Britain
- Major audit of the British countryside
- Complete land cover census for Great Britain and
Northern Ireland - Partnership between NERC and Government
Departments - CS2007 8M over 4 years
- moving to continuous programme?
49- CS2007
- Habitats, landscape features, land use
- Plant community structure
- Freshwater biology
- Soils chemical, physical and biological
- Land Cover Map
- Integrated Ecosystem Assessments
50CS field survey
Mapping habitats and landscape features in each
1km square
Surveying/sampling of vegetation, birds,
freshwater biota, soils and soil biodiversity
51CS field survey
- 1 km squares across GB
- wide range of survey sampling plots
52CS soil sampling
Inner 2 m2 quadrat of 200 m2 X-plot
- 5 X plots in each 1 km square
- 1978 and CS2000 256 squares ? 1256 samples
- CS2007 max. 600 1 km squares ? 3000 samples
53- New Methods for Looking at Change
- CS2007 and Molecular Ecology
- first country-level survey of microbial diversity
in terrestrial ecosystems and bacterial pathogen
distribution (1300 samples) - establish baseline measurements for future
surveys - UK wide genomic archive of our microbial
biodiversity - key drivers of change in microbial communities
high density microarray technologies to assess
multiple taxa and relationships to soil quality
(ca 650 determinative probes to most major
bacterial soil taxa)
Soil cores
54Isolates cultured from R. Taff
Colonies Amplicon sequences from colonies were
identical to GenBank X16293 (bovine MAP) Water
(PCR amplicon) 16 of 19 from river water DNA
extract had a single nucleotide polymorphism at
position 214 This is consistent with a different
strain of M. avium subspecies paratuberculosis in
the river, unculturable by the methods we
used----now associated with ovine sources
55River Taff
Fig1. Distribution of MAP isolates and
corresponding RFLP types.
RFLP-type A
RFLP-type D
RFLP-type B-C1
RFLP-type B
RFLP-type E
RFLP-type B-C13
RFLP-type B-C17
RFLP-type C