环境DNA
生物
濒危物种
大流行
爆发
人类健康
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)
计算生物学
环境规划
疾病
生态学
生物多样性
地理
病毒学
传染病(医学专业)
环境卫生
医学
病理
栖息地
作者
Jessica Farrell,Liam Whitmore,David J. Duffy
出处
期刊:BioScience
[Oxford University Press]
日期:2021-02-16
卷期号:71 (6): 609-625
被引量:69
标识
DOI:10.1093/biosci/biab027
摘要
Abstract Novel forensics-inspired molecular approaches have revolutionized species detection in the wild and are particularly useful for tracing endangered or invasive species. These new environmental DNA or RNA (eDNA or eRNA)–based techniques are now being applied to human and animal pathogen surveillance, particularly in aquatic environments. They allow better disease monitoring (presence or absence and geographical spread) and understanding of pathogen occurrence and transmission, benefitting species conservation and, more recently, our understanding of the COVID-19 global human pandemic. In the present article, we summarize the benefits of eDNA-based monitoring, highlighted by two case studies: The first is a fibropapillomatosis tumor-associated herpesvirus (chelonid herpesvirus 5) driving a sea turtle panzootic, and the second relates to eRNA-based detection of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus driving the COVID-19 human pandemic. The limitations of eDNA- or eRNA-based approaches are also summarized, and future directions and recommendations of the field are discussed. Continuous eDNA- or eRNA-based monitoring programs can potentially improve human and animal health by predicting disease outbreaks in advance, facilitating proactive rather than reactive responses.
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