O'Donnell Kerry, Sutton Deanna A, Rinaldi Michael G, Magnon Karen C, Cox Patricia A, Revankar Sanjay G, Sanche Stephen, Geiser David M, Juba Jean H, van Burik Jo-Anne H, Padhye Arvind, Anaissie Elias J, Francesconi Andrea, Walsh Thomas J, Robinson Jody S
National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Peoria, IL 61604-3999, USA.
J Clin Microbiol. 2004 Nov;42(11):5109-20. doi: 10.1128/JCM.42.11.5109-5120.2004.
Fusarium oxysporum is a phylogenetically diverse monophyletic complex of filamentous ascomycetous fungi that are responsible for localized and disseminated life-threatening opportunistic infections in immunocompetent and severely neutropenic patients, respectively. Although members of this complex were isolated from patients during a pseudoepidemic in San Antonio, Tex., and from patients and the water system in a Houston, Tex., hospital during the 1990s, little is known about their genetic relatedness and population structure. This study was conducted to investigate the global genetic diversity and population biology of a comprehensive set of clinically important members of the F. oxysporum complex, focusing on the 33 isolates from patients at the San Antonio hospital and on strains isolated in the United States from the water systems of geographically distant hospitals in Texas, Maryland, and Washington, which were suspected as reservoirs of nosocomial fusariosis. In all, 18 environmental isolates and 88 isolates from patients spanning four continents were genotyped. The major finding of this study, based on concordant results from phylogenetic analyses of multilocus DNA sequence data and amplified fragment length polymorphisms, is that a recently dispersed, geographically widespread clonal lineage is responsible for over 70% of all clinical isolates investigated, including all of those associated with the pseudoepidemic in San Antonio. Moreover, strains of the clonal lineage recovered from patients were conclusively shown to genetically match those isolated from the hospital water systems of three U.S. hospitals, providing support for the hypothesis that hospitals may serve as a reservoir for nosocomial fusarial infections.
尖孢镰刀菌是丝状子囊菌的一个系统发育多样的单系复合体,分别导致免疫功能正常和严重中性粒细胞减少患者发生局部和播散性危及生命的机会性感染。尽管在20世纪90年代,该复合体的成员在得克萨斯州圣安东尼奥的一次假流行期间从患者中分离出来,以及在得克萨斯州休斯顿的一家医院的患者和水系统中分离出来,但对它们的遗传相关性和种群结构知之甚少。本研究旨在调查尖孢镰刀菌复合体一组全面的临床重要成员的全球遗传多样性和种群生物学,重点关注圣安东尼奥医院患者的33株分离株以及在美国从得克萨斯州、马里兰州和华盛顿地理上相距遥远的医院的水系统中分离的菌株,这些医院被怀疑是医院内镰刀菌病的储存宿主。总共对来自四大洲的18株环境分离株和88株患者分离株进行了基因分型。基于多位点DNA序列数据的系统发育分析和扩增片段长度多态性的一致结果,本研究的主要发现是,一个最近分散、地理上广泛分布的克隆谱系占所有调查临床分离株的70%以上,包括所有与圣安东尼奥假流行相关的分离株。此外,从患者中分离出的克隆谱系菌株经确凿证明在基因上与从美国三家医院的医院水系统中分离出的菌株相匹配,这为医院可能是医院内镰刀菌感染的储存宿主这一假说提供了支持。