TY -的T1 - < em的从动物传播给人>Mycobacterium pinnipedii JF - European Respiratory Journal JO - Eur Respir J DO - 10.1183/13993003.00371-2020 VL - 56 IS - 6 SP - 2000371 AU - Macedo, Rita AU - Isidro, Joana AU - Gomes, Maria Conceição AU - Botelho, Ana AU - Albuquerque, Teresa AU - Sogorb, Arlete AU - Bernardino, Rui AU - Fernandes, Teresa Lobo AU - Mourato, Teresa AU - Durval, Mário AU - Gomes, João Paulo Y1 - 2020/12/01 UR - //www.qdcxjkg.com/content/56/6/2000371.abstract N2 - Mycobacterium pinnipedii, the known causative agent of tuberculosis (TB) in marine mammals, was only recognised as a member of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex in 2003 [1] and is believed to cause TB in several species, including nonmarine mammals [2, 3] and even humans [4]. The assumption of zoonotic transmission has been strongly reinforced by a disruptive study published in 2014 by a team of archaeologists from Tübingen, Germany [5]. Based on archaeological and genomic investigations on millennial human skeletons, the authors implicated sea mammals infected with M. pinnipedii as a source of New World human TB. Considering that this phenomenon pre-dates the human migrations to South America by several centuries, they refuted the previous scientific hypothesis of TB driven by human contact [6].Use of culture isolation and whole-genome sequencing analysis to report the first confirmed case of animal-to-human transmission of Mycobacterium pinnipedii involving a sea lion and a keeper in a zoo https://bit.ly/3hEYu3s ER -