Rohmer Laurence, Jacobs Michael A, Brittnacher Mitchell J, Fong Christine, Hayden Hillary S, Hocquet Didier, Weiss Eli J, Radey Matthew, Germani Yves, Talukder Kaisar Ali, Hager Anthony J, Kemner John M, Sims-Day Elizabeth H, Matamouros Susana, Hager Kyle R, Miller Samuel I
Department of Microbiology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
BMC Genomics. 2014 May 10;15(1):355. doi: 10.1186/1471-2164-15-355.
Shigella dysenteriae type 1 (Sd1) causes recurrent epidemics of dysentery associated with high mortality in many regions of the world. Sd1 infects humans at very low infectious doses (10 CFU), and treatment is complicated by the rapid emergence of antibiotic resistant Sd1 strains. Sd1 is only detected in the context of human infections, and the circumstances under which epidemics emerge and regress remain unknown.
Phylogenomic analyses of 56 isolates collected worldwide over the past 60 years indicate that the Sd1 clone responsible for the recent pandemics emerged at the turn of the 20th century, and that the two world wars likely played a pivotal role for its dissemination. Several lineages remain ubiquitous and their phylogeny indicates several recent intercontinental transfers. Our comparative genomics analysis reveals that isolates responsible for separate outbreaks, though closely related to one another, have independently accumulated antibiotic resistance genes, suggesting that there is little or no selection to retain these genes in-between outbreaks. The genomes appear to be subjected to genetic drift that affects a number of functions currently used by diagnostic tools to identify Sd1, which could lead to the potential failure of such tools.
Taken together, the Sd1 population structure and pattern of evolution suggest a recent emergence and a possible human carrier state that could play an important role in the epidemic pattern of infections of this human-specific pathogen. This analysis highlights the important role of whole-genome sequencing in studying pathogens for which epidemiological or laboratory investigations are particularly challenging.
1型痢疾志贺菌(Sd1)在世界许多地区引发痢疾的反复流行,并伴有高死亡率。Sd1以极低的感染剂量(10 CFU)感染人类,且抗生素耐药性Sd1菌株的迅速出现使治疗变得复杂。Sd1仅在人类感染的情况下被检测到,其流行出现和消退的情况仍不明朗。
对过去60年全球收集的56株分离株进行的系统基因组分析表明,导致近期大流行的Sd1克隆出现在20世纪之交,两次世界大战可能对其传播起到了关键作用。几个谱系仍然无处不在,它们的系统发育表明最近有几次洲际转移。我们的比较基因组学分析表明,尽管负责不同疫情爆发的分离株彼此密切相关,但它们独立积累了抗生素耐药基因,这表明在疫情爆发之间几乎没有或根本没有选择来保留这些基因。这些基因组似乎受到了遗传漂变的影响,而遗传漂变会影响目前诊断工具用于识别Sd1的一些功能,这可能导致此类工具的潜在失效。
综合来看,Sd1的种群结构和进化模式表明其近期出现,并且可能存在人类携带状态,这可能在这种人类特异性病原体的感染流行模式中发挥重要作用。该分析突出了全基因组测序在研究流行病学或实验室调查特别具有挑战性病原体方面的重要作用。