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House Flies Are Underappreciated Yet Important Reservoirs and Vectors of Microbial Threats to Animal and Human Health

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MICROORGANISMS
卷 11, 期 3, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms11030583

关键词

house fly; vector; bacterial pathogen; antimicrobial resistance; AMR; antibiotic resistance

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House flies are recognized as filth-associated organisms causing public nuisances. They bridge the gap between breeding environments and habitations, creating sanitation issues. Scientific surveys show that fly carriage of bacterial pathogens is more widespread and dangerous than thought, including antimicrobial resistance genes. Flies not only harbor but also transmit viable and infectious bacterial pathogens. The extent of fly dissemination of pathogens is extensive. The house fly's role as a reservoir, disseminator, and vector for pathogens has been greatly underestimated.
House flies are well recognized as filth-associated organisms and public nuisances. House flies create sanitation issues when they bridge the gap between microbe-rich breeding environments and animal/human habitations. Numerous scientific surveys have demonstrated that house flies harbor bacterial pathogens that pose a threat to humans and animals. More extensive and informative surveys incorporating next-generation sequencing technologies have shown that house fly carriage of pathogens and harmful genetic elements, such as antimicrobial resistance genes, is more widespread and dangerous than previously thought. Further, there is a strong body of research confirming that flies not only harbor but also transmit viable, and presumably infectious, bacterial pathogens. Some pathogens replicate and persist in the fly, permitting prolonged shedding and dissemination. Finally, although the drivers still have yet to be firmly determined, the potential range of dissemination of flies and their associated pathogens can be extensive. Despite this evidence, the house flies' role as reservoirs, disseminators, and true, yet facultative, vectors for pathogens have been greatly underestimated and underappreciated. In this review, we present key studies that bolster the house fly's role both an important player in microbial ecology and population biology and as transmitters of microbial threats to animal and human health.

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