Microbe hunting in the modern era: reflecting on a decade of microbial genomic epidemiology
Since the first recognition that infectious microbes serve as the causes of many human diseases, physicians and scientists have sought to understand and control their spread. For the past 150+ years, these ‘microbe hunters’ have learned to combine epidemiological information with knowledge of the in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Current biology 2020-10, Vol.30 (19), p.R1124-R1130 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Since the first recognition that infectious microbes serve as the causes of many human diseases, physicians and scientists have sought to understand and control their spread. For the past 150+ years, these ‘microbe hunters’ have learned to combine epidemiological information with knowledge of the infectious agent(s). In this essay, I reflect on the evolution of microbe hunting, beginning with the history of pre-germ theory epidemiological studies, through the microbiological and molecular eras. Now in the genomic age, modern-day microbe hunters are combining pathogen whole-genome sequencing with epidemiological data to enhance epidemiological investigations, advance our understanding of the natural history of pathogens and drivers of disease, and ultimately reshape our plans and priorities for global disease control and eradication. Indeed, as we have seen during the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, the role of microbe hunters is now more important than ever. Despite the advances already made by microbial genomic epidemiology, the field is still maturing, with many more exciting developments on the horizon.
John Snow’s pioneering work on a London cholera outbreak in 1854 ushered in the golden age of microbial epidemiology. Now, Kate Baker reflects on how advances of the genomics era have been integrated with historical methods to inspire a new generation of microbe hunters, yielding new insights into the spread of infectious diseases. |
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ISSN: | 0960-9822 1879-0445 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cub.2020.06.097 |