Logo Tropentag

Tropentag 2023, September 20 - 22, Berlin, Germany

"Competing pathways for equitable food systems transformation: trade-offs and synergies."


Surveillance of climate-sensitive zoonotic diseases: Leptospirosis at livestock slaughterhouses in three regions of Uganda

Lordrick Alinaitwe1,3, Martin Wainaina2, Kristina Roesel1, Clovice Kankya3, Salome Duerr4, Martin Richter2, Elizabeth Cook1, Anne Mayer-Scholl2

1International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), Kenya
2Federal Institute for Risk Assessment, Dept. of Biological Safety, Germany
3Makerere University, College of Veterinary Medicine, Animal Resources and Biosecurity, Uganda
4University of Bern, Veterinary Public Health Institute, Switzerland


Abstract


Leptospirosis is an important bacterial zoonosis worldwide and is disproportionately associated with low-income settings and with extreme weather events due to climate change. Transmission to humans often occurs when infected rodents and domestic animals contaminate the environment via urine as the bacteria preferentially colonise kidneys. Surveillance of leptospirosis at slaughterhouses can therefore be useful in providing information on vast areas of a country and screening for diseases that are not considered during animal inspections.
We determined the prevalence of Leptospira bacteria in the kidneys of 2,030 livestock kidney samples (820 cattle, 761 pigs, 335 goats, 114 sheep), and 117 small mammals by real-time PCR in a cross-sectional survey of slaughter facilities in three regions in Uganda. We extracted DNA and performed real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests targeting the lipL32 gene for pathogenic leptospires. Positive samples with cycle threshold values below 38 were further characterised using single locus sequence typing (SLST) to determine likely genomospecies. PCR products were sequenced by Eurofins Genomics (Ebersberg, Germany) and identification of genomospecies was done using the basic local alignment search tool (BLAST). Multi-locus sequencing typing (MLST) was performed on selected SLST-positive samples to determine sequence types (ST) and likely serogroups. The allelic profiles were analysed using Bionumerics software and the sequence types were determined using the PubMLST database.
An overall prevalence of pathogenic leptospires of 2.58 % (95 % confidence intervals [CI]: 1.89–3.42) was observed, with sheep having the highest prevalence (6.12 % CI: 2.69–12.89), followed by cattle (4.25 %, 95 % CI: 2.91–5.98), goats (2.08 %, 95 % CI=0.91–4.38), and pigs (0.46 %, 95 % CI = 0.12–1.31) in decreasing order. The genomospecies L. borgpetersenii (11 in cattle and one in goat), L. kirschneri (five in cattle and four in sheep) and L. interrogans (one in a pig) were determined. Preliminary MLST results on one sample reveal L. kirschneri ST62 which is related to serogroup Grippotyphosa.
Surveillance of important zoonoses using slaughterhouses as sentinels has the potential to offer essential information on the epidemiology of important zoonotic diseases in Uganda. This synergy can be explored in other similar informal food markets.


Keywords: Climate sensitive diseases, disease surveillance, livestock, slaughterhouse, Uganda


Contact Address: Martin Wainaina, Federal Institute for Risk Assessment, Dept. of Biological Safety, Berlin, Germany, e-mail: martin-wainaina.kimari@bfr.bund.de


Valid HTML 3.2!