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Virus genomes reveal factors that spread and sustained the Ebola epidemic.

Authors :
Dudas, Gytis
Dudas, Gytis
Carvalho, Luiz Max
Bedford, Trevor
Tatem, Andrew J
Baele, Guy
Faria, Nuno R
Park, Daniel J
Ladner, Jason T
Arias, Armando
Asogun, Danny
Bielejec, Filip
Caddy, Sarah L
Cotten, Matthew
D'Ambrozio, Jonathan
Dellicour, Simon
Di Caro, Antonino
Diclaro, Joseph W
Duraffour, Sophie
Elmore, Michael J
Fakoli, Lawrence S
Faye, Ousmane
Gilbert, Merle L
Gevao, Sahr M
Gire, Stephen
Gladden-Young, Adrianne
Gnirke, Andreas
Goba, Augustine
Grant, Donald S
Haagmans, Bart L
Hiscox, Julian A
Jah, Umaru
Kugelman, Jeffrey R
Liu, Di
Lu, Jia
Malboeuf, Christine M
Mate, Suzanne
Matthews, David A
Matranga, Christian B
Meredith, Luke W
Qu, James
Quick, Joshua
Pas, Suzan D
Phan, My VT
Pollakis, Georgios
Reusken, Chantal B
Sanchez-Lockhart, Mariano
Schaffner, Stephen F
Schieffelin, John S
Sealfon, Rachel S
Simon-Loriere, Etienne
Smits, Saskia L
Stoecker, Kilian
Thorne, Lucy
Tobin, Ekaete Alice
Vandi, Mohamed A
Watson, Simon J
West, Kendra
Whitmer, Shannon
Wiley, Michael R
Winnicki, Sarah M
Wohl, Shirlee
Wölfel, Roman
Yozwiak, Nathan L
Andersen, Kristian G
Blyden, Sylvia O
Bolay, Fatorma
Carroll, Miles W
Dahn, Bernice
Diallo, Boubacar
Formenty, Pierre
Fraser, Christophe
Gao, George F
Garry, Robert F
Goodfellow, Ian
Günther, Stephan
Happi, Christian T
Holmes, Edward C
Kargbo, Brima
Keïta, Sakoba
Kellam, Paul
Koopmans, Marion PG
Kuhn, Jens H
Loman, Nicholas J
Magassouba, N'Faly
Naidoo, Dhamari
Nichol, Stuart T
Nyenswah, Tolbert
Palacios, Gustavo
Pybus, Oliver G
Sabeti, Pardis C
Sall, Amadou
Ströher, Ute
Wurie, Isatta
Suchard, Marc A
Lemey, Philippe
Rambaut, Andrew
Dudas, Gytis
Dudas, Gytis
Carvalho, Luiz Max
Bedford, Trevor
Tatem, Andrew J
Baele, Guy
Faria, Nuno R
Park, Daniel J
Ladner, Jason T
Arias, Armando
Asogun, Danny
Bielejec, Filip
Caddy, Sarah L
Cotten, Matthew
D'Ambrozio, Jonathan
Dellicour, Simon
Di Caro, Antonino
Diclaro, Joseph W
Duraffour, Sophie
Elmore, Michael J
Fakoli, Lawrence S
Faye, Ousmane
Gilbert, Merle L
Gevao, Sahr M
Gire, Stephen
Gladden-Young, Adrianne
Gnirke, Andreas
Goba, Augustine
Grant, Donald S
Haagmans, Bart L
Hiscox, Julian A
Jah, Umaru
Kugelman, Jeffrey R
Liu, Di
Lu, Jia
Malboeuf, Christine M
Mate, Suzanne
Matthews, David A
Matranga, Christian B
Meredith, Luke W
Qu, James
Quick, Joshua
Pas, Suzan D
Phan, My VT
Pollakis, Georgios
Reusken, Chantal B
Sanchez-Lockhart, Mariano
Schaffner, Stephen F
Schieffelin, John S
Sealfon, Rachel S
Simon-Loriere, Etienne
Smits, Saskia L
Stoecker, Kilian
Thorne, Lucy
Tobin, Ekaete Alice
Vandi, Mohamed A
Watson, Simon J
West, Kendra
Whitmer, Shannon
Wiley, Michael R
Winnicki, Sarah M
Wohl, Shirlee
Wölfel, Roman
Yozwiak, Nathan L
Andersen, Kristian G
Blyden, Sylvia O
Bolay, Fatorma
Carroll, Miles W
Dahn, Bernice
Diallo, Boubacar
Formenty, Pierre
Fraser, Christophe
Gao, George F
Garry, Robert F
Goodfellow, Ian
Günther, Stephan
Happi, Christian T
Holmes, Edward C
Kargbo, Brima
Keïta, Sakoba
Kellam, Paul
Koopmans, Marion PG
Kuhn, Jens H
Loman, Nicholas J
Magassouba, N'Faly
Naidoo, Dhamari
Nichol, Stuart T
Nyenswah, Tolbert
Palacios, Gustavo
Pybus, Oliver G
Sabeti, Pardis C
Sall, Amadou
Ströher, Ute
Wurie, Isatta
Suchard, Marc A
Lemey, Philippe
Rambaut, Andrew
Source :
Nature; vol 544, iss 7650, 309-315; 0028-0836
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The 2013-2016 West African epidemic caused by the Ebola virus was of unprecedented magnitude, duration and impact. Here we reconstruct the dispersal, proliferation and decline of Ebola virus throughout the region by analysing 1,610 Ebola virus genomes, which represent over 5% of the known cases. We test the association of geography, climate and demography with viral movement among administrative regions, inferring a classic 'gravity' model, with intense dispersal between larger and closer populations. Despite attenuation of international dispersal after border closures, cross-border transmission had already sown the seeds for an international epidemic, rendering these measures ineffective at curbing the epidemic. We address why the epidemic did not spread into neighbouring countries, showing that these countries were susceptible to substantial outbreaks but at lower risk of introductions. Finally, we reveal that this large epidemic was a heterogeneous and spatially dissociated collection of transmission clusters of varying size, duration and connectivity. These insights will help to inform interventions in future epidemics.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nature; vol 544, iss 7650, 309-315; 0028-0836
Notes :
application/pdf, Nature vol 544, iss 7650, 309-315 0028-0836
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391614420
Document Type :
Electronic Resource