Publications by authors named "Duron O"

Article Synopsis
  • The study focused on tick-borne Apicomplexa parasites that cause diseases like babesiosis and theileriosis in wildlife and livestock.
  • Researchers collected and analyzed a diverse sample of 1161 specimens, including wild mammals and ticks from the Amazon rainforest in French Guiana.
  • They identified eight genovariants of various parasites, suggesting both known and potentially new species, with infections primarily detected in wild mammals rather than birds, and noted unique transmission patterns in South America.
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Rickettsia, a genus of obligate intracellular bacteria, includes species that cause significant human diseases. This study challenges previous claims that the Leucine-973 residue in the RNA polymerase beta subunit is the primary determinant of rifampin resistance in Rickettsia. We investigated a previously untested Rickettsia species, R.

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Symbiosis with intracellular bacteria is essential for the nutrition of ticks, particularly through the biosynthesis of B vitamins. Yet, ticks of the genus Ixodes, which include major vectors of human pathogens, lack the nutritional symbionts usually found in other tick genera. This paradox raises questions about the mechanisms that Ixodes ticks use to prevent nutritional deficiencies.

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is a maternally inherited intracellular bacterium that infects a wide range of arthropods including mosquitoes. The endosymbiont is widely used in biocontrol strategies due to its capacity to modulate arthropod reproduction and limit pathogen transmission. infections in spp.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates Ehrlichia and Anaplasma bacteria in the rainforests of French Guiana, revealing a rich diversity of these infections among humans, wildlife, and ticks in the region.
  • - New strains specific to French Guiana were identified, including unusual transmission cycles involving rainforest animals, highlighting potential health risks for humans.
  • - Findings include the detection of potential pathogens in human blood and ticks, with distinct virulence factors observed, suggesting unique health hazards in the Amazon compared to Northern Hemisphere regions.
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Filarial nematodes of the Dipetalonema lineage include tick-borne filarioids that infect both domestic and wild vertebrate hosts, but they remain understudied in many cases. In this study, we conducted a molecular characterization of a Dipetalonema-like filarioid (DLF) recently identified in two tick species in French Guiana, South America. While the cox1 mitochondrial gene was the sole marker initially sequenced for describing DLF, its classification and phylogenetic relationship with other members of the Dipetalonema lineage were unclear.

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Since the discovery of natural malaria vector populations infected by the endosymbiont bacterium , a renewed interest has arisen for using this bacterium as an alternative for malaria control. Among naturally infected mosquitoes, , a major malaria mosquito in Central Africa, exhibits one of the highest prevalences of infection. To better understand whether this maternally inherited bacterium could be used for malaria control, we investigated influence in populations naturally infected by the malaria parasite .

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Background: Ticks are major vectors of diseases affecting humans such as Lyme disease or domestic animals such as anaplasmosis. Cross-alteration of the vertebrate host skin microbiome and the tick microbiome may be essential during the process of tick feeding and for the mechanism of pathogen transmission. However, it has been poorly investigated.

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Filarial nematodes of the Dipetalonema lineage are widespread parasites and include some species that are transmitted by ticks. In this study, we conducted a large molecular survey of ticks in French Guiana, South America, to understand the overall diversity of tick-borne filarioids in this remote region largely covered by dense tropical forests. Out of 682 ticks belonging to 22 species and 6 genera, 21 ticks (3.

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Midichloria spp. are intracellular bacterial symbionts of ticks. Representatives of this genus colonise mitochondria in the cells of their hosts.

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The family Anaplasmataceae includes tick-borne bacteria of major public and veterinary health interest, as best illustrated by members of the genera Anaplasma and Ehrlichia. Recent epidemiological surveys have also reported on the presence of a novel putative genus in the Anaplasmataceae, Candidatus Allocryptoplasma, previously described as Candidatus Cryptoplasma in the western black-legged tick, Ixodes pacificus. However, the genetic diversity of Ca.

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In light of current international public health challenges, calls for inter- and transdisciplinary research are increasing, particularly in response to complex and intersecting issues. Although widely used under the One Health flag, it is still unclear how inter- and transdisciplinary science should be applied to infectious disease research, public health, and the different stakeholders. Here, we present and discuss our common scientific and biomedical experience in French Guiana, South America to conduct and enrich research in vector-borne and zoonotic infectious diseases, with the aim to translate findings to public health and political stakeholders.

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Background: Ticks and tick-borne pathogens significantly impact both human and animal health and therefore are of major concern to the scientific community. Knowledge of tick-borne pathogens is crucial for prescription of mitigation measures. In Africa, much research on ticks has focused on domestic animals.

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Background: Trypanosomes are protozoan parasites of vertebrates that are of medical and veterinary concern. A variety of blood-feeding invertebrates have been identified as vectors, but the role of ticks in trypanosome transmission remains unclear.

Methods: In this study, we undertook extensive molecular screening for the presence and genetic diversity of trypanosomes in field ticks.

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We report a case of unusual human anaplasmosis in the Amazon rainforest of French Guiana. Molecular typing demonstrated that the pathogen is a novel Anaplasma species, distinct to all known species, and more genetically related to recently described Anaplasma spp. causing infections in rainforest wild fauna of Brazil.

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Article Synopsis
  • The symbiont-associated (SA) environmental package is an expansion of the MIxS standards created by the Parasite Microbiome Project and the Genomics Standard Consortium, focusing on symbiont-associated microbiota.
  • This package provides a framework for collecting and reporting metadata related to symbionts, such as their life history, interactions with hosts, and the type of relationships they have ranging from mutualism to parasitism.
  • A key feature of the SA package is its ability to allow users to co-localize samples and nest metadata packages, making it easier to report complex sampling designs from various environments.
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Many animals are dependent on microbial partners that provide essential nutrients lacking from their diet. Ticks, whose diet consists exclusively on vertebrate blood, rely on maternally inherited bacterial symbionts to supply B vitamins. While previously studied tick species consistently harbor a single lineage of those nutritional symbionts, we evidence here that the invasive tick harbors a unique dual-partner nutritional system between an ancestral symbiont, , and a more recently acquired symbiont, .

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The past decade has seen the emergence of a new type of food allergy occurring after ingestion of mammalian meat. This allergy is related to immunoglobulin (Ig)E specific for galactose-alpha-1,3 galactose (α-Gal). Originally described in the United States in 2009, other cases have subsequently been described in Australia and in Europe, but still very few in Latin America.

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Symbiosis with vitamin-provisioning microbes is essential for the nutrition of animals with some specialized feeding habits. While coevolution favors the interdependence between symbiotic partners, their associations are not necessarily stable: Recently acquired symbionts can replace ancestral symbionts. In this study, we demonstrate successful replacement by Francisella-like endosymbionts (-LE), a group of B-vitamin-provisioning endosymbionts, across tick communities driven by horizontal transfers.

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The microbiome of blood-sucking arthropods can shape their competence to acquire and maintain infections with vector-borne pathogens. We used a controlled study to investigate the interactions between Borrelia afzelii, which causes Lyme borreliosis in Europe, and the bacterial microbiome of Ixodes ricinus, its primary tick vector. We applied a surface sterilization treatment to eggs to produce dysbiosed tick larvae that had a low bacterial abundance and a changed bacterial microbiome compared to those of the control larvae.

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Article Synopsis
  • Ticks called Ixodes ricinus can carry bacteria that cause diseases like Lyme disease, and they also have good bacteria that don't harm them.
  • Researchers studied how these bacteria affect ticks' growth and survival when the ticks fed on infected or uninfected mice.
  • The study found that while ticks feeding on infected mice grew a little faster, the overall impact of the bacteria on their growth and health wasn't big or important.
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French Guiana is a European ultraperipheric region located on the northern Atlantic coast of South America. It constitutes an important forested region for biological conservation in the Neotropics. Although very sparsely populated, with its inhabitants mainly concentrated on the Atlantic coastal strip and along the two main rivers, it is marked by the presence and development of old and new epidemic disease outbreaks, both research and health priorities.

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