Literature detail

Cross-species pathogen transmission and disease emergence in primates.

Amy B Pedersen1 T Jonathan Davies
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution, Institutes of Evolutionary Biology, Immunology and Infection Research, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Ashworth Labs, Edinburgh EH93JT, UK. [email protected]
PMID 20232229 2009 Ecohealth eng ppublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

Many of the most virulent emerging infectious diseases in humans, e.g., AIDS and Ebola, are zoonotic, having shifted from wildlife populations. Critical questions for predicting disease emergence are: (1) what determines when and where a disease will first cross from one species to another, and (2) which factors facilitate emergence after a successful host shift. In wild primates, infectious diseases most often are shared between species that are closely related and inhabit the same geographic region. Therefore, humans may be most vulnerable to diseases from the great apes, which include chimpanzees and gorillas, because these species represent our closest relatives. Geographic overlap may provide the opportunity for cross-species transmission, but successful infection and establishment will be determined by the biology of both the host and pathogen. We extrapolate the evolutionary relationship between pathogen sharing and divergence time between primate species to generate "hotspot" maps, highlighting regions where the risk of disease transfer between wild primates and from wild primates to humans is greatest. We find that central Africa and Amazonia are hotspots for cross-species transmission events between wild primates, due to a high diversity of closely related primate species. Hotspots of host shifts to humans will be most likely in the forests of central and west Africa, where humans come into frequent contact with their wild primate relatives. These areas also are likely to sustain a novel epidemic due to their rapidly growing human populations, close proximity to apes, and population centers with high density and contact rates among individuals.

Host-Pathogen Interactions Africa, Central Animals Communicable Diseases, Emerging Geography Humans Models, Biological Primate Diseases Primates South America Zoonoses

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Cross-species transmission of pathogens occurs among wild primates in regions with high primate diversity such as central Africa and Amazonia.

Virus
Not specified
Location
Supporting text

We find that central Africa and Amazonia are hotspots for cross-species transmission events between wild primates, due to a high diversity of closely related primate species.

Study design
modeling study
Transmission direction
animal-to-animal
Geographic raw
central Africa
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.70
Key finding

Central Africa and Amazonia were identified as ecological hotspots where primate diversity and human–ape contact rates create conditions favorable for pathogen spillover and maintenance in wild primate populations.

Virus
Not specified
Host
Location
Supporting text

We find that central Africa and Amazonia are hotspots for cross-species transmission events between wild primates, due to a high diversity of closely related primate species. Hotspots of host shifts to humans will be most likely in the forests of central and west Africa, where humans come into frequent contact with their wild primate relatives.

Method
ecological modeling
Geographic raw
central Africa and Amazonia
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

The paper predicts that wild primates such as apes in central and west Africa are the likely sources of future spillover infections to humans due to frequent contact.

Virus
Not specified
Location
Supporting text

Hotspots of host shifts to humans will be most likely in the forests of central and west Africa, where humans come into frequent contact with their wild primate relatives.

Study design
modeling study
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
forests of central and west Africa