Whole-Genome sequencing in routine Mycobacterium bovis epidemiology – scoping the potential

Author:

Allen Adrian1ORCID,Magee Ryan2,Devaney Ryan1ORCID,Ardis Tara1,McNally Caitlín1,McCormick Carl1,Presho Eleanor1,Doyle Michael1,Ranasinghe Purnika1ORCID,Johnston Philip3,Kirke Raymond3,Harwood Roland3,Farrell Damien45ORCID,Kenny Kevin5,Smith Jordy4ORCID,Gordon Stephen4ORCID,Ford Tom1ORCID,Thompson Suzan1,Wright Lorraine1,Jones Kerri1,Prodohl Paulo2ORCID,Skuce Robin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Agrifood and Biosciences Institute, Veterinary Sciences Division, Belfast, UK

2. Queen’s University Belfast, school of Biological Sciences, UK

3. Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs for Northern Ireland, Belfast, UK

4. University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland

5. Central Veterinary Research Laboratory, Kildare, Ireland

Abstract

Mycobacterium bovis the main agent of bovine tuberculosis (bTB), presents as a series of spatially-localised micro-epidemics across landscapes. Classical molecular typing methods applied to these micro-epidemics, based on genotyping a few variable loci, have significantly improved our understanding of potential epidemiological links between outbreaks. However, they have limited utility owing to low resolution. Conversely, whole-genome sequencing (WGS) provides the highest resolution data available for molecular epidemiology, producing richer outbreak tracing, insights into phylogeography and epidemic evolutionary history. We illustrate these advantages by focusing on a common single lineage of M. bovis (1.140) from Northern Ireland. Specifically, we investigate the spatial sub-structure of 20 years of herd-level multi locus VNTR analysis (MLVA) surveillance data and WGS data from a down sampled subset of isolates of this MLVA type over the same time frame. We mapped 2108 isolate locations of MLVA type 1.140 over the years 2000–2022. We also mapped the locations of 148 contemporary WGS isolates from this lineage, over a similar geographic range, stratifying by single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) relatedness cut-offs of 15 SNPs. We determined a putative core range for the 1.140 MLVA type and SNP-defined sequence clusters using a 50 % kernel density estimate, using cattle movement data to inform on likely sources of WGS isolates found outside of core ranges. Finally, we applied Bayesian phylogenetic methods to investigate past population history and reproductive number of the 1.140 M. bovis lineage. We demonstrate that WGS SNP-defined clusters exhibit smaller core ranges than the established MLVA type - facilitating superior disease tracing. We also demonstrate the superior functionality of WGS data in determining how this lineage was disseminated across the landscape, likely via cattle movement and to infer how its effective population size and reproductive number has been in flux since its emergence. These initial findings highlight the potential of WGS data for routine monitoring of bTB outbreaks.

Funder

Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs, UK Government

Publisher

Microbiology Society

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