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Patterns of gastrointestinal bacterial exchange between chimpanzees and humans involved in research and tourism in western Uganda
Authors:Tony L Goldberg  Thomas R Gillespie  Innocent B Rwego  Elizabeth L Estoff
Institution:a University of Illinois, College of Veterinary Medicine, Department of Pathobiology, 2001 South Lincoln Avenue, Urbana, IL 61802, USA
b University of Illinois, Department of Anthropology, 607 S. Matthews Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801, USA
c University of Illinois Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 505 South Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801, USA
d Makerere University, Department of Zoology, Kampala, Uganda
e Department of Anthropology and McGill University School of Environment, McGill University, Montreal, Que., Canada H3A 2T7
Abstract:Ecological overlap may increase the risks of microbial exchange between humans and wild non-human primates. Escherichia coli bacteria were collected from chimpanzees and humans in Kibale National Park, western Uganda, in May and June 2004, in order to examine whether interaction between humans and apes in the wild might affect gastrointestinal bacterial communities in the two species. Chimpanzees harbored bacteria genetically more similar to those of humans employed in chimpanzee-directed research and tourism than to those of humans from a local village. Most humans (81.6%) and 4.4% of chimpanzees harbored at least one isolate resistant to locally available antibiotics. In isolates from both humans and chimpanzees, resistance was higher to five of these antibiotics than to Ceftiofur, an antibiotic not available in the region. These data indicate that humans and apes interacting in the wild can share genetically and phenotypically similar gastrointestinal bacteria, presumably originating from common environmental sources. Strategies to limit transmission of pathogens between humans and primates, whether that transmission is direct or indirect, would benefit both human health and primate conservation.
Keywords:Chimpanzee  Escherichia coli  Pan troglodytes  Transmission  Tourism  Uganda  Zoonoses  Molecular epidemiology
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