Kathariou S, Graves L, Buchrieser C, Glaser P, Siletzky R M, Swaminathan B
Department of Food Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-7624, USA.
Foodborne Pathog Dis. 2006 Fall;3(3):292-302. doi: 10.1089/fpd.2006.3.292.
In 1998-99, a multistate outbreak of listeriosis in the United States was associated with contaminated hot dogs and was caused by a strain of Listeria monocytogenes serotype 4b that had been only rarely encountered before in the national PulseNet database. Upon further characterization, the strains from this outbreak were designated as Epidemic Clone II (ECII). ECII isolates exhibited diversification in a genomic region ("region 18") that was otherwise conserved among L. monocytogenes of serotype 4b. Additional unique genetic markers were identified through genome sequencing of one of the isolates from the 1998-99 outbreak. In 2002, another multistate outbreak of listeriosis also involved bacteria of serotype 4b and was attributed to contaminated turkey deli meats. Molecular subtyping data revealed that the macrorestriction patterns of the isolates from the 1998-99 and 2002 outbreaks were closely related. In addition, the 2002 outbreak isolates harbored chromosomal genetic markers found to be unique to, and typical of, the 1998-99 outbreak isolates, including diversification in genomic region 18. Macroarray- based subtyping using chromosomal sequences confirmed the close genetic relatedness between the isolates from the two outbreaks. Genomic content was highly conserved among isolates from each outbreak, with differences detected only in prophage and internalin-like gene sequences. However, since these differences were observed among isolates from each of the outbreaks, they did not differentiate the 1998-99 isolates as a group from those of the 2002 outbreak. Two of 15 randomly chosen serotype 4b clinical isolates from a non-outbreak period (calendar year 2003) appeared to be closely related to the 1998-99 and 2002 outbreak isolates. These findings suggest that both multistate outbreaks of listeriosis in the United States involved closely related members of a single clonal group (ECII) that had not been identified in outbreaks prior to 1998. Since the outbreaks involved different food vehicles and processing plants, the findings suggest establishment of ECII in a still unidentified reservoir in the United States, from which the organisms were introduced to different processing plants.
1998 - 1999年,美国多地爆发的李斯特菌病疫情与受污染的热狗有关,疫情由一种4b型单核细胞增生李斯特菌菌株引起,该菌株在国家脉冲网数据库中此前很少见。经过进一步鉴定,此次疫情的菌株被指定为流行克隆II型(ECII)。ECII分离株在一个基因组区域(“区域18”)表现出多样性,而在4b型单核细胞增生李斯特菌的其他菌株中该区域是保守的。通过对1998 - 1999年疫情的一个分离株进行全基因组测序,鉴定出了其他独特的遗传标记。2002年,美国又一次多地爆发的李斯特菌病疫情也涉及4b型细菌,此次疫情归因于受污染的火鸡熟食肉。分子分型数据显示,1998 - 1999年和2002年疫情分离株的宏观限制性图谱密切相关。此外,2002年疫情分离株含有在1998 - 1999年疫情分离株中发现的独特且典型的染色体遗传标记,包括基因组区域18的多样性。使用染色体序列的基于宏阵列的分型证实了两次疫情分离株之间密切的遗传相关性。每次疫情的分离株之间基因组内容高度保守,仅在原噬菌体和类内化素基因序列中检测到差异。然而,由于这些差异在每次疫情的分离株中都有观察到,它们并不能将1998 - 1999年的分离株与2002年疫情的分离株区分开来。从非疫情时期(2003年日历年)随机选择的15株4b型临床分离株中有两株似乎与1998 - 1999年和2002年疫情分离株密切相关。这些发现表明,美国的两次多地李斯特菌病疫情都涉及一个单一克隆群(ECII)中密切相关的成员,该克隆群在1998年之前的疫情中未被识别。由于两次疫情涉及不同的食品载体和加工厂,这些发现表明ECII在美国一个仍未确定的储存库中定殖,病原体从该储存库被引入到不同的加工厂。