Snapshot of Moving and Expanding Clones of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Their Global Distribution Assessed by Spoligotyping in an International Study

Author:

Filliol Ingrid1,Driscoll Jeffrey R.2,van Soolingen Dick3,Kreiswirth Barry N.4,Kremer Kristin3,Valétudie Georges1,Anh Dang Duc5,Barlow Rachael6,Banerjee Dilip7,Bifani Pablo J.4,Brudey Karine1,Cataldi Angel8,Cooksey Robert C.9,Cousins Debby V.10,Dale Jeremy W.11,Dellagostin Odir A.12,Drobniewski Francis13,Engelmann Guido14,Ferdinand Séverine1,Gascoyne-Binzi Deborah6,Gordon Max1,Gutierrez M. Cristina15,Haas Walter H.16,Heersma Herre3,Kassa-Kelembho Eric17,Ly Ho Minh5,Makristathis Athanasios18,Mammina Caterina19,Martin Gerald20,Moström Peter1,Mokrousov Igor21,Narbonne Valérie22,Narvskaya Olga21,Nastasi Antonino23,Niobe-Eyangoh Sara Ngo15,Pape Jean W.24,Rasolofo-Razanamparany Voahangy25,Ridell Malin26,Rossetti M. Lucia27,Stauffer Fritz28,Suffys Philip N.29,Takiff Howard30,Texier-Maugein Jeanne31,Vincent Véronique15,de Waard Jacobus H.32,Sola Christophe1,Rastogi Nalin1

Affiliation:

1. Unité de la Tuberculose et des Mycobactéries, Institut Pasteur de Guadeloupe, Pointe-à-Pitre, Guadeloupe

2. Wadsworth Center, New York State Department Of Health, Albany New York

3. Diagnosis Laboratory for Infectious Diseases and Perinatal Screening RIVM, Bilthoven, The Netherlands

4. Public Health Research Institute, Tuberculosis Center, Newark, New Jersey

5. National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, Hanoi, Vietnam

6. Department of Microbiology, Leeds General Infirmary, Leeds

7. Medical School, St Georges Hospital

8. Instituto de Biotecnologia INTA, Moron, Argentina

9. Tuberculosis Mycobacteriology Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia

10. Australian Reference Laboratory for Bovine Tuberculosis, Department of Agriculture, South Perth, Australia

11. University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey, United Kingdom

12. Centro de Biotecnologia, Universidade Federal de Pelotas, Pelotas

13. Mycobacterium Reference Unit, PHLS, Dulwich Hospital, London

14. University Childrens Hospital, Heidelberg

15. Centre National de Référence des Mycobactéries, Institut Pasteur, Paris

16. Infektions Epidemiology, Robert Koch Institute, Berlin

17. Institut Pasteur de Bangui, Bangui, Central African Republic

18. Klinische Mikrobiologie, Hygiene-Institut der Universität

19. Department of Hygiene and Microbiology, University of Palermo, Palermo

20. Bundesinstitut für Gesundheitlichen Verbraucherschutz und Veterinärmedizin, Jena, Germany

21. Laboratory of Molecular Microbiology, Saint Petersburg Pasteur Institute, Saint Petersburg, Russia

22. Laboratoire de Bactériologie, CHU de Brest, Brest

23. Department of Public Health, University of Florence, Florence, Italy

24. Les Centres Gheskio, INLR, Port au Prince, Haïti

25. Institut Pasteur de Madagascar, Tananarive, Madagascar

26. Institute of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden

27. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre

28. Bundesstaatliche Bakteriologisch-Serologische Untersuchungsanstalt Wien, Vienna, Austria

29. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Fiocruz, Oswaldo Cruz Institute, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

30. IVIC, Centro de Microbiología y Biología Celular, Laboratorio de Genética Molecular

31. Laboratoire de Bactériologie, CHU de Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France

32. Tuberculosis Laboratory, Instituto de Biomedicina, Caracas, Venezuela

Abstract

ABSTRACT The present update on the global distribution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex spoligotypes provides both the octal and binary descriptions of the spoligotypes for M. tuberculosis complex, including Mycobacterium bovis , from >90 countries (13,008 patterns grouped into 813 shared types containing 11,708 isolates and 1,300 orphan patterns). A number of potential indices were developed to summarize the information on the biogeographical specificity of a given shared type, as well as its geographical spreading (matching code and spreading index, respectively). To facilitate the analysis of hundreds of spoligotypes each made up of a binary succession of 43 bits of information, a number of major and minor visual rules were also defined. A total of six major rules (A to F) with the precise description of the extra missing spacers (minor rules) were used to define 36 major clades (or families) of M. tuberculosis . Some major clades identified were the East African-Indian (EAI) clade, the Beijing clade, the Haarlem clade, the Latin American and Mediterranean (LAM) clade, the Central Asian (CAS) clade, a European clade of IS 6110 low banders (X; highly prevalent in the United States and United Kingdom), and a widespread yet poorly defined clade (T). When the visual rules defined above were used for an automated labeling of the 813 shared types to define nine superfamilies of strains ( Mycobacterium africanum , Beijing, M. bovis , EAI, CAS, T, Haarlem, X, and LAM), 96.9% of the shared types received a label, showing the potential for automated labeling of M. tuberculosis families in well-defined phylogeographical families. Intercontinental matches of shared types among eight continents and subcontinents (Africa, North America, Central America, South America, Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia, and the Far East) are analyzed and discussed.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

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