Department of Mycobacterium Reference and Research, Research Institute of Tuberculosis, Japan Anti-Tuberculosis Association, Kiyose, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Infectious Diseases, Osaka Prefectural Institute of Public Health, Osaka, Japan.
Microbiol Spectr. 2024 Jul 2;12(7):e0428923. doi: 10.1128/spectrum.04289-23. Epub 2024 May 24.
Most people infected with () are believed to be in a state of latent tuberculosis (TB) infection (LTBI). Although LTBI is asymptomatic and not infectious, there is a risk of developing active disease even decades after infection. Here, to characterize mutations acquired during LTBI, we collected and analyzed genomes from seven Japanese patient pairs, each pair consisting of two active TB patients whose starting dates of developing active disease were >3 years apart; one had a high suspicion of LTBI before developing active disease, whereas the other did not. Thereafter, we compared these genomes with those of longitudinal sample pairs within a host of chronic active TB infections combined with public data. The bacterial populations in patients with LTBI were genetically more homogeneous and accumulated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) slower than those from active disease. Moreover, the lower proportion of nonsynonymous SNPs indicated weaker selective pressures during LTBI than active disease. Finally, the different mutation spectrums indicated different mutators between LTBI and active disease. These results suggest that the likelihood of the acquisition of mutations responsible for antibiotic resistance and increased virulence was lower in the population from LTBI than active disease.IMPORTANCEControlling latent tuberculosis (TB) infection (LTBI) activation is an effective strategy for TB elimination, where understanding () dynamics within the host plays an important role. Previous studies on chronic active disease reported that accumulated genomic mutations within the host, possibly resulting in acquired drug resistance and increased virulence. However, several reports suggest that fewer mutations accumulate during LTBI than during the active disease, but the associated risk is largely unknown. Here, we analyzed the genomic dynamics of within the host during LTBI. Our results statistically suggest that accumulates mutations during LTBI, but most mutations are under low selective pressures, which induce mutations responsible for drug resistance and virulence. Thus, we propose that LTBI acts as a source for new TB disease rather than as a period for in-host genome evolution.
大多数感染 ()的人被认为处于潜伏性结核(TB)感染(LTBI)状态。尽管 LTBI 没有症状且不具有传染性,但在感染后甚至几十年都有发展为活动性疾病的风险。在这里,为了描述 LTBI 期间获得的突变,我们收集并分析了来自 7 对日本患者的 基因组,每对患者都包含两名发病时间相隔>3 年的活动性 TB 患者;其中一名在发病前高度怀疑 LTBI,而另一名则没有。此后,我们将这些基因组与来自慢性活动性 TB 感染宿主的纵向样本对以及公共数据进行了比较。LTBI 患者的细菌种群在遗传上更同质,积累单核苷酸多态性(SNP)的速度比活性疾病慢。此外,非同义 SNP 的比例较低表明 LTBI 期间的选择压力比活性疾病弱。最后,不同的突变谱表明 LTBI 和活性疾病之间存在不同的突变体。这些结果表明,LTBI 中的 种群获得导致抗生素耐药性和毒力增加的突变的可能性低于活性疾病。
重要性:控制潜伏性结核(TB)感染(LTBI)的激活是消除结核病的有效策略,其中了解宿主内 ()的动态变化起着重要作用。先前关于慢性活动性疾病的研究报告称,宿主内的 积累了基因组突变,可能导致获得性药物耐药性和增加的毒力。然而,有几项报告表明,LTBI 期间积累的突变比活性疾病期间少,但相关风险在很大程度上尚不清楚。在这里,我们分析了 LTBI 期间宿主内的 基因组动态。我们的结果从统计学上表明,LTBI 期间 积累了突变,但大多数突变处于低选择压力下,这会导致导致药物耐药性和毒力的突变。因此,我们提出 LTBI 是新的结核病发病的来源,而不是宿主内基因组进化的时期。