The Roslin Institute, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Institute of Immunology, University Medicine Greifswald, Greifswald, Germany.
PLoS Pathog. 2024 Jul 24;20(7):e1012378. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1012378. eCollection 2024 Jul.
Human activities such as agriculturalization and domestication have led to the emergence of many new pathogens via host-switching events between humans, domesticated and wild animals. Staphylococcus aureus is a multi-host opportunistic pathogen with a global healthcare and economic burden. Recently, it was discovered that laboratory and wild rodents can be colonised and infected with S. aureus, but the origins and zoonotic potential of rodent S. aureus is unknown. In order to trace their evolutionary history, we employed a dataset of 1249 S. aureus genome sequences including 393 of isolates from rodents and other small mammals (including newly determined sequences for 305 isolates from 7 countries). Among laboratory mouse populations, we identified multiple widespread rodent-specific S. aureus clones that likely originated in humans. Phylogeographic analysis of the most common murine lineage CC88 suggests that it emerged in the 1980s in laboratory mouse facilities most likely in North America, from where it spread to institutions around the world, via the distribution of mice for research. In contrast, wild rodents (mice, voles, squirrels) were colonized with a unique complement of S. aureus lineages that are widely disseminated across Europe. In order to investigate the molecular basis for S. aureus adaptation to rodent hosts, genome-wide association analysis was carried out revealing a unique complement of bacteriophages associated with a rodent host ecology. Of note, we identified novel prophages and pathogenicity islands in rodent-derived S. aureus that conferred the potential for coagulation of rodent plasma, a key phenotype of abscess formation and persistence. Our findings highlight the remarkable capacity of S. aureus to expand into new host populations, driven by the acquisition of genes promoting survival in new host-species.
人类的农业和驯化活动导致了许多新病原体的出现,这些病原体通过人类、家养和野生动物之间的宿主转换事件而产生。金黄色葡萄球菌是一种多宿主机会性病原体,给全球的医疗保健和经济带来了负担。最近,人们发现实验室和野生啮齿动物可能会被金黄色葡萄球菌定植和感染,但啮齿动物金黄色葡萄球菌的来源和人畜共患病潜力尚不清楚。为了追踪它们的进化史,我们利用了包括 393 株来自啮齿动物和其他小型哺乳动物(包括来自 7 个国家的 305 株新分离株)的金黄色葡萄球菌基因组序列数据集 1249 个。在实验室鼠群中,我们鉴定出了多个广泛存在的、可能起源于人类的啮齿动物特异性金黄色葡萄球菌克隆。最常见的鼠型 CC88 谱系的系统发育地理分析表明,它起源于 20 世纪 80 年代的实验室小鼠设施,很可能起源于北美,然后通过用于研究的小鼠的分布,传播到世界各地的机构。相比之下,野生啮齿动物(老鼠、田鼠、松鼠)被定植了一组独特的金黄色葡萄球菌谱系,这些谱系在欧洲广泛传播。为了研究金黄色葡萄球菌适应啮齿动物宿主的分子基础,我们进行了全基因组关联分析,揭示了与啮齿动物宿主生态学相关的一组独特的噬菌体。值得注意的是,我们在源自啮齿动物的金黄色葡萄球菌中鉴定出了新型的前噬菌体和毒力岛,赋予了其凝结啮齿动物血浆的潜力,这是脓肿形成和持续存在的一个关键表型。我们的研究结果突出了金黄色葡萄球菌向新宿主群体扩展的显著能力,这是由促进在新宿主物种中生存的基因的获得所驱动的。