On the phylogeny, detection and behaviour of Clostridial pathogens in the soil

Clostridial pathogens are the aetiological agents for various human and animal diseases. Their presence in soils, manure and other organic wastes can give rise to multiple routes of infection via ingestion, inhalation or contamination of wounds, crops or silage with soil containing vegetative cells...

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Main Author: Palmer, Joseph Samuel
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56457/
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author Palmer, Joseph Samuel
author_facet Palmer, Joseph Samuel
author_sort Palmer, Joseph Samuel
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Clostridial pathogens are the aetiological agents for various human and animal diseases. Their presence in soils, manure and other organic wastes can give rise to multiple routes of infection via ingestion, inhalation or contamination of wounds, crops or silage with soil containing vegetative cells or spores. More qualitative and quantitative data are needed on the distribution, abundance and behaviour of these pathogens in agricultural soils to better manage risk. This project investigated how various soil and land-management factors affect the prevalence and survival of key pathogenic Clostridia in the soil. A multidisciplinary approach was used to develop molecular tools for clostridial diagnostics. For accurate strain identification, single and multi-gene markers were used to produce an updated phylogeny for members of the Class Clostridia, indicating examples of misnamed and misclassified strains. For rapid, simultaneous detection of Clostridia, proof-of-concept for an automated multiplex ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis (AMRISA) protocol was devised, and its utility demonstrated on agricultural soils collected from sites in north-east Scotland. Clinically important Clostridia were identified in soils across farms, including Paeniclostridium sordellii and Clostridium novyi, which were prevalent in all soils. Farm management type, season and grazing levels affected the clostridial community, with Pn. sordellii prevalence and relative abundance highest under dairy and beef regimes. C. novyi abundance was highest in the winter. Permanent waterlogging had a pronounced effect on pathogen abundance, although short-term changes in soil moisture had little observable effect. Microcosm studies indicated that Clostridioides difficile, C. perfringens and C. sporogenes were more persistent when spiked into drier soils compared to soils with higher moisture contents. Future work should increase pathogen surveillance on farms and identify the effect of other soil characteristics on pathogen behaviour, to understand disease epidemiology and establish appropriate risk-aversion practices.
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spelling nottingham-564572025-02-28T14:28:28Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56457/ On the phylogeny, detection and behaviour of Clostridial pathogens in the soil Palmer, Joseph Samuel Clostridial pathogens are the aetiological agents for various human and animal diseases. Their presence in soils, manure and other organic wastes can give rise to multiple routes of infection via ingestion, inhalation or contamination of wounds, crops or silage with soil containing vegetative cells or spores. More qualitative and quantitative data are needed on the distribution, abundance and behaviour of these pathogens in agricultural soils to better manage risk. This project investigated how various soil and land-management factors affect the prevalence and survival of key pathogenic Clostridia in the soil. A multidisciplinary approach was used to develop molecular tools for clostridial diagnostics. For accurate strain identification, single and multi-gene markers were used to produce an updated phylogeny for members of the Class Clostridia, indicating examples of misnamed and misclassified strains. For rapid, simultaneous detection of Clostridia, proof-of-concept for an automated multiplex ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis (AMRISA) protocol was devised, and its utility demonstrated on agricultural soils collected from sites in north-east Scotland. Clinically important Clostridia were identified in soils across farms, including Paeniclostridium sordellii and Clostridium novyi, which were prevalent in all soils. Farm management type, season and grazing levels affected the clostridial community, with Pn. sordellii prevalence and relative abundance highest under dairy and beef regimes. C. novyi abundance was highest in the winter. Permanent waterlogging had a pronounced effect on pathogen abundance, although short-term changes in soil moisture had little observable effect. Microcosm studies indicated that Clostridioides difficile, C. perfringens and C. sporogenes were more persistent when spiked into drier soils compared to soils with higher moisture contents. Future work should increase pathogen surveillance on farms and identify the effect of other soil characteristics on pathogen behaviour, to understand disease epidemiology and establish appropriate risk-aversion practices. 2019-07-17 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56457/1/PhDthesisJPALMER.pdf Palmer, Joseph Samuel (2019) On the phylogeny, detection and behaviour of Clostridial pathogens in the soil. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Clostridia; Clostridium; Pathogens; Survival
spellingShingle Clostridia; Clostridium; Pathogens; Survival
Palmer, Joseph Samuel
On the phylogeny, detection and behaviour of Clostridial pathogens in the soil
title On the phylogeny, detection and behaviour of Clostridial pathogens in the soil
title_full On the phylogeny, detection and behaviour of Clostridial pathogens in the soil
title_fullStr On the phylogeny, detection and behaviour of Clostridial pathogens in the soil
title_full_unstemmed On the phylogeny, detection and behaviour of Clostridial pathogens in the soil
title_short On the phylogeny, detection and behaviour of Clostridial pathogens in the soil
title_sort on the phylogeny, detection and behaviour of clostridial pathogens in the soil
topic Clostridia; Clostridium; Pathogens; Survival
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56457/