Forensic genomics of a novel Klebsiella quasipneumoniae type from a neonatal intensive care unit in China reveals patterns of colonization, evolution and epidemiology

Author:

Perlaza-Jiménez Laura1ORCID,Wu Qing1ORCID,Torres Von Vergel L.2ORCID,Zhang Xiaoxiao3ORCID,Li Jiahui21ORCID,Rocker Andrea2ORCID,Lithgow Trevor2ORCID,Zhou Tieli1ORCID,Vijaykrishna Dhanasekaran21ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The First Affiliated Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University, Wenzhou, PR China

2. Infection and Immunity Program, Biomedicine Discovery Institute and Department of Microbiology, Monash University, Australia

3. Women’s Hospital School of Medicine Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, PR China

Abstract

During March 2017, a neonatal patient with severe diarrhoea subsequently developed septicaemia and died, with Klebsiella isolated as the causative microorganism. In keeping with infection control protocols, the coincident illness of an attending staff member and three other neonates with Klebsiella infection triggered an outbreak response, leading to microbiological assessment of isolates collected from the staff member and all 21 co-housed neonates. Multilocus sequence typing and genomic sequencing identified that the isolates from the 21 neonates were of a new Klebsiella sequence type, ST2727, and taxonomically belonged to K. quasipneumoniae subsp. similipneumoniae (formerly referred to as KpIIB). Genomic characterization showed that the isolated ST2727 strains had diverged from other K. quasipneumoniae subsp. similipneumoniae strains at least 90 years ago, whereas the neonatal samples were highly similar with a genomic divergence of 3.6 months. There was no relationship to the Klebsiella isolate from the staff member. This demonstrates that no transmission occurred from staff to patient or between patients. Rather, the data suggest that ST2727 colonized each neonate from a common hospital source. Sequence-based analysis of the genomes revealed several genes for antimicrobial resistance and some virulence features, but suggest that ST2727 is neither extremely-drug resistant nor hypervirulent. Our results highlight the clinical significance and genomic properties of ST2727 and urge genome-based measures be implemented for diagnostics and surveillance within hospital environments. Additionally, the present study demonstrates the need to scale the power of genomic analysis in retrospective studies where relatively few samples are available.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Health Department of Zhejiang Province of the People's Republic of China

Zhejiang Provincial Program for the Cultivation of High-Level Innovative Health Talents

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

General Medicine

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