Genomic Signatures of the Haarlem Lineage of Mycobacterium tuberculosis : Implications of Strain Genetic Variation in Drug and Vaccine Development

Author:

Cubillos-Ruiz Andrés1,Sandoval Andrea1,Ritacco Viviana2,López Beatriz2,Robledo Jaime34,Correa Nidia34,Hernandez-Neuta Iván1,Zambrano Maria Mercedes1,Del Portillo Patricia14

Affiliation:

1. Corporación Corpogen, Carrera 5 no. 66A-34, Bogotá, Colombia

2. Instituto Nacional de Enfermedades Infecciosas ANLIS “Carlos G. Malbrán,” Velez Sarsfield 563, Buenos Aires, Argentina

3. Corporación para Investigaciones Biológicas, CIB, Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Carrera 72a no. 78B-141, Medellín, Colombia

4. Centro Colombiano de Investigación en Tuberculosis, Medellín, Colombia

Abstract

ABSTRACT Tuberculosis is the world's leading cause of death due to a single infectious agent, and efforts aimed at its control require a better understanding of host, environmental, and bacterial factors that govern disease outcome. Growing evidence indicates that certain Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains of distinct phylogeographic lineages elicit unique immunopathological events. However, identifying the genetic basis of these phenotypic peculiarities has proven difficult. Here we report the presence of six large sequence polymorphisms which, together with two single-nucleotide changes previously described by our group, consistently differentiate Haarlem strains from the remaining M. tuberculosis lineages. The six newly found Haarlem-specific genetic events are four deletions, which altogether involve more than 13 kb, and two intragenic insertions of the element IS 6110 . The absence of the genes involved in these polymorphisms could have an important physiological impact on Haarlem strains, i.e., by affecting key genes, such as Rv1354c and cyp121 , which have been recently proposed as plausible drug targets. These lineage-specific polymorphisms can serve as genetic markers for the rapid PCR identification of Haarlem strains, providing a useful tool for strain surveillance and molecular epidemiology studies. Strain variability such as that described here underscores the need for the definition of a core set of essential genes in M. tuberculosis that are ubiquitously present in all circulating lineages, as a requirement in the development of effective antituberculosis drugs and vaccines.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

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