Affiliation:
1. Department of Food Science
2. Washington State University, Pullman, Washington
3. University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia
4. Department of Population Medicine and Diagnostic Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
5. Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health, Albany, New York
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The prevalence, among human clinical cases, of
Salmonella enterica
serotype 4,5,12:i:−, a serotype antigenically similar to
Salmonella enterica
serotype Typhimurium but lacking second-phase flagellar antigens, has increased considerably over the last 10 years. To probe the evolution and ecology of this emerging serotype, we characterized 190
Salmonella
isolates initially classified as
Salmonella
serotypes 4,5,12:i:− (
n
= 90) and Typhimurium (
n
= 100) and obtained from various sources in the United States and Spain. These isolates were characterized into six sequence types (determined by multilocus sequence typing [MLST]) and 79 pulsed-field gel electrophoresis types. The majority of
Salmonella
serotype 4,5,12:i:− and Typhimurium isolates (85 and 84 isolates, respectively) represented a single MLST type. Existing genome information revealed different genome deletions (which included genes responsible for phase 2 flagellum expression) in four Spanish
Salmonella
serotype 4,5,12:i:− isolates and one U.S.
Salmonella
serotype 4,5,12:i:− isolate. Fifty-nine isolates of both serotypes, representing different sources and geographical locations as well as different molecular subtypes, were thus screened for the presence of six genes and one specific region, all of which were previously found to show variable presence among
Salmonella
serotype 4,5,12:i:− and Typhimurium strains. All
Salmonella
serotype 4,5,12:i:− isolates lacked the phase 2 flagella genes
fljA
and
fljB
, which were present in all
Salmonella
serotype Typhimurium isolates. While all Spanish
Salmonella
serotype 4,5,12:i:− isolates carried the same deletion surrounding
fljAB
, all but two U.S. isolates showed a different genomic deletion; the two atypical U.S. isolates represented the “Spanish” deletion genotype and a unique deletion genotype.
Salmonella
serotype 4,5,12:i:− thus appears to represent at least two common clones, which cannot easily be differentiated with standard diagnostic procedures.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology