The Roslin Institute and Edinburgh Infectious Diseases, University of Edinburgh, Easter Bush, Midlothian, United Kingdom.
mBio. 2013 Aug 13;4(4):e00356-13. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00356-13.
The importance of livestock as a source of bacterial pathogens with the potential for epidemic spread in human populations is unclear. In recent years, there has been a global increase in community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) infections of healthy humans, but an understanding of the different evolutionary origins of CA-MRSA clones and the basis for their recent expansion is lacking. Here, using a high-resolution phylogenetic approach, we report the discovery of two emergent clones of human epidemic CA-MRSA which resulted from independent livestock-to-human host jumps by the major bovine S. aureus complex, CC97. Of note, one of the new clones was isolated from human infections on four continents, demonstrating its global dissemination since the host jump occurred over 40 years ago. The emergence of both human S. aureus clones coincided with the independent acquisition of mobile genetic elements encoding antimicrobial resistance and human-specific mediators of immune evasion, consistent with an important role for these genetic events in the capacity to survive and transmit among human populations. In conclusion, we provide evidence that livestock represent a reservoir for the emergence of new human-pathogenic S. aureus clones with the capacity for pandemic spread. These findings have major public health implications highlighting the importance of surveillance for early identification of emergent clones and improved transmission control measures at the human-livestock interface.
Animals are the major source of new pathogens affecting humans. However, the potential for pathogenic bacteria that originally were found in animals to switch hosts and become widely established in human populations is not clear. Here, we report the discovery of emergent clones of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) that originated in livestock and switched to humans, followed by host-adaptive evolution and epidemic spread in global human populations. Our findings demonstrate that livestock can act as a reservoir for the emergence of new human bacterial clones with potential for pandemic spread, highlighting the potential role of surveillance and biosecurity measures in the agricultural setting for preventing the emergence of new human pathogens.
牲畜作为人类群体中具有流行潜力的细菌病原体的来源的重要性尚不清楚。近年来,社区获得性耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌(CA-MRSA)在健康人群中的感染在全球范围内有所增加,但对于 CA-MRSA 克隆的不同进化起源及其最近扩张的基础知之甚少。在这里,我们使用高分辨率的系统发育方法,报告了发现的两个源自主要牛源金黄色葡萄球菌 CC97 的独立的牲畜向人类宿主跳跃的新兴人类流行 CA-MRSA 克隆体。值得注意的是,其中一个新克隆体从四大洲的人类感染中分离出来,这表明它自宿主跳跃发生以来的 40 多年来在全球传播。两个人类金黄色葡萄球菌克隆体的出现都与携带抗生素耐药性和人类特有的免疫逃避介质的移动遗传元件的独立获得同时发生,这与这些遗传事件在人类群体中生存和传播的能力中起着重要作用是一致的。总之,我们提供的证据表明,牲畜是具有大流行传播能力的新型人致病金黄色葡萄球菌克隆体出现的一个来源。这些发现具有重大的公共卫生意义,突出了对新兴克隆体进行早期鉴定和改进人际传播控制措施的重要性。