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  EASTBIO Metagenomic approaches to characterising Leptospira diversity in Africa and the implications for the diagnosis and control of leptospirosis in humans and livestock.


   School of Biological Sciences

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  Dr M Moseley, Dr L Avery, Dr S Telfer  No more applications being accepted  Competition Funded PhD Project (Students Worldwide)

About the Project

Supervisors:

Dr Mark Moseley (University of Aberdeen)
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Mark_Moseley

Dr Lisa Avery (The James Hutton Institute)
https://www.hutton.ac.uk/staff/lisa-avery

Dr Sandra Telfer (University of Aberdeen)
https://www.abdn.ac.uk/sbs/people/profiles/s.telfer

Environmentally transmitted pathogens are responsible for some of the most important zoonoses and livestock diseases in the world. The epidemiology of these diseases is often complex, with environments, such as water sources, playing a crucial role as interfaces across which transmission can occur between multiple host species. There is increasing evidence that the diversity of multi-host, environmentally transmitted pathogens is underestimated and that virulence and the importance of environmental transmission may differ between species or strains, even within the same pathogen genera (1). Therefore, characterising the diversity of these pathogens in the environment is crucial to improving diagnostic assays, identifying which strains are responsible for human and livestock disease and predicting and mitigating disease risk.
Many environmentally transmitted pathogens are exceptionally challenging and time consuming to culture, making traditional microbiological approaches to characterising pathogen diversity difficult. However, rapid advances in whole genome and marker gene metagenomic approaches and portable DNA sequencing technologies are revolutionising our ability to isolate and sequence target DNA from complex sample matrices, such as environmental samples, or samples with low levels of target DNA, such as clinical samples (2). These approaches, which enable characterisation of pathogen diversity from field samples without requiring culture, are particularly useful in the developing world where the specialised facilities and capacity required for culturing pathogens may be lacking.
Leptospira spp. are some of the world’s most common environmentally transmitted pathogens, responsible for an estimated 60000 human deaths a year and significant livestock productivity loss, with the greatest burden of disease falling on the poorest communities in the developing world. Humans and livestock are predominantly infected through contact with environments, such as water sources, contaminated with urine from infected maintenance hosts. In Africa, recent studies have identified a wide diversity of Leptospira strains, many of which are not represented in any reference culture collections, in small mammals and livestock (3). Although these findings suggest that the diversity of potentially pathogenic Leptospira spp. in Africa is underestimated, sampling the broad range of potential reservoir hosts in Africa would be logistically unfeasible.
Building on existing and ongoing projects in South Africa, Madagascar and Tanzania, this project will use samples from potentially contaminated environments, data from concurrent reservoir host sampling and clinical samples from humans and livestock to i) characterise the diversity of potentially pathogenic Leptospira strains in the environment, ii) identify the strains responsible for human and livestock disease, iii) tailor existing assays to improve the diagnosis of leptospirosis and iv) explore how results could be used to inform strategies aimed at mitigating disease risk for humans and livestock. There will be opportunity for the student’s interests to drive the evolution of the project and the student will receive multidisciplinary training and interact with experts in disease ecology, veterinary science, public health and statistics.

Application Procedure:

http://www.eastscotbiodtp.ac.uk/how-apply-0

Please send your completed EASTBIO application form, along with academic transcripts to Alison McLeod at [Email Address Removed]. Two references should be provided by the deadline using the EASTBIO reference form. Please advise your referees to return the reference form to [Email Address Removed].

Funding Notes

This 4 year PhD project is part of a competition funded by EASTBIO BBSRC Doctoral Training Partnership http://www.eastscotbiodtp.ac.uk/how-apply-0. This opportunity is open to UK and International students and provides funding to cover stipend and UK level tuition (limited funding is available to provide international tuition fees). Please refer to UKRI website and Annex B of the UKRI Training Grant Terms and Conditions for full eligibility criteria.

Candidates should have (or expect to achieve) a minimum of a 2:1 UK Honours degree, or the equivalent qualifications gained outside the UK, in a relevant subject.

References

1. Vincent AT, Schiettekatte O, Goarant C, Neela VK, Bernet E, Thibeaux R, et al. Revisiting the taxonomy and evolution of pathogenicity of the genus Leptospira through the prism of genomics. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 13(5): e0007270. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007270
2. Pérez-Cobas AE, Gomez-Valero L, Buchrieser C. Metagenomic approaches in microbial ecology: an update on whole-genome and marker gene sequencing analyses. Microb genomics. 2020;6(8). https://doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000409
3. Rahelinirina S, Moseley MH, Allan KJ, Ramanohizakandrainy E, Ravaoarinoro S, Rajerison M, et al. Leptospira in livestock in Madagascar: uncultured strains, mixed infections and small mammal-livestock transmission highlight challenges in controlling and diagnosing leptospirosis in the developing world. Parasitology. 2019;1–7. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0031182019001252


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