Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex lineage 5 exhibits high levels of within-lineage genomic diversity and differing gene content compared to the type strain H37Rv

Author:

Sanoussi C. N'Dira123,Coscolla Mireia4ORCID,Ofori-Anyinam Boatema56ORCID,Otchere Isaac Darko7ORCID,Antonio Martin8ORCID,Niemann Stefan910ORCID,Parkhill Julian1112ORCID,Harris Simon12ORCID,Yeboah-Manu Dorothy7ORCID,Gagneux Sebastien1314ORCID,Rigouts Leen12ORCID,Affolabi Dissou3ORCID,de Jong Bouke C.2ORCID,Meehan Conor J.152ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium

2. Mycobacteriology Unit, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium

3. Laboratoire de Référence des Mycobactéries, Cotonou, Benin

4. I2SysBio, University of Valencia-FISABIO Joint Unit, Valencia, Spain

5. Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers University, New Jersey, USA

6. Food and Drugs Authority, Accra, Ghana

7. Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, University of Ghana, Legon, Accra, Ghana

8. Medical Research Council Unit in The Gambia at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Fajara, The Gambia

9. Research Center Borstel, Molecular and Experimental Mycobacteriology, Borstel, Germany

10. German Center for Infection Research, partner site Borstel-Hamburg-Lübeck-Riems, Borstel, Germany

11. Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

12. Wellcome Sanger Institute, Hinxton, UK

13. University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland

14. Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, Switzerland

15. School of Chemistry and Biosciences, University of Bradford, Bradford, UK

Abstract

Pathogens of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) are considered to be monomorphic, with little gene content variation between strains. Nevertheless, several genotypic and phenotypic factors separate strains of the different MTBC lineages (L), especially L5 and L6 (traditionally termed Mycobacterium africanum ) strains, from each other. However, this genome variability and gene content, especially of L5 strains, has not been fully explored and may be important for pathobiology and current approaches for genomic analysis of MTBC strains, including transmission studies. By comparing the genomes of 355 L5 clinical strains (including 3 complete genomes and 352 Illumina whole-genome sequenced isolates) to each other and to H37Rv, we identified multiple genes that were differentially present or absent between H37Rv and L5 strains. Additionally, considerable gene content variability was found across L5 strains, including a split in the L5.3 sub-lineage into L5.3.1 and L5.3.2. These gene content differences had a small knock-on effect on transmission cluster estimation, with clustering rates influenced by the selected reference genome, and with potential overestimation of recent transmission when using H37Rv as the reference genome. We conclude that full capture of the gene diversity, especially high-resolution outbreak analysis, requires a variation of the single H37Rv-centric reference genome mapping approach currently used in most whole-genome sequencing data analysis pipelines. Moreover, the high within-lineage gene content variability suggests that the pan-genome of M. tuberculosis is at least several kilobases larger than previously thought, implying that a concatenated or reference-free genome assembly (de novo) approach may be needed for particular questions.

Funder

Directorate General for Development (DGD), Belgium

H2020 European Research Council

Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades

Generalitat Valenciana

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

General Medicine

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