Genomic markers of drug resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis populations with minority variants

Author:

Zhang Xiaomei123ORCID,Lam Connie23,Martinez Elena234,Sim Eby23,Crighton Taryn34,Marais Ben J.12,Sintchenko Vitali1234

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Research Excellence in Tuberculosis (TB-CRE), Centenary Institute , Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

2. Sydney Infectious Diseases Institute (Sydney ID), The University of Sydney , Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

3. Centre for Infectious Diseases and Microbiology-Public Health, Westmead Hospital , Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

4. NSW Mycobacterium Reference Laboratory,Centre for Infectious Diseases and Microbiology-Laboratory Services, Institute of Clinical Pathology and Medical Research, NSW Health Pathology , Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACT Minority variants of Mycobacterium tuberculosis harboring mutations conferring resistance can become dominant populations during tuberculosis (TB) treatment, leading to treatment failure. Our understanding of drug-resistant within-host subpopulations and the frequency of resistance-conferring mutations in minority variants remains limited. M. tuberculosis sequences recovered from liquid cultures of culture-confirmed TB cases notified between January 2017 and December 2021 in New South Wales, Australia were examined. Potential drug resistance-conferring minority variants were identified using LoFreq, and mixed populations of different M. tuberculosis strains (≥100 SNPs apart) were examined using QuantTB. A total of 1831 routinely sequenced M. tuberculosis strains were included in the analysis. Drug resistance-conferring minority variants were detected in 3.5% (65/1831) of sequenced cultures; 84.6% (55/65) had majority strains that were drug susceptible and 15.4% (10/65) had majority strains that were drug resistant. Minority variants with high-confidence drug resistance-conferring mutations were 1.5 times more common when the majority strains were drug resistant. Mixed M. tuberculosis strain populations were documented in 10.0% (183/1831) of specimens. Minority variants with high-confidence drug resistance-conferring mutations were more frequently detected in mixed M. tuberculosis strain populations (2.7%, 5/183) than in single strain populations (0.6%, 10/1648; P = 0.01). Drug-resistant minority variants require monitoring in settings that implement routine M. tuberculosis sequencing. The frequency with which drug-resistant minority variants are detected is likely influenced by pre-culture requirement. Culture-independent sequencing methods should provide a more accurate reflection of drug-resistant subpopulations.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

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