Affiliation:
1. Groupe de Recherche sur les Antimicrobiens et les Microorganismes (G.R.A.M. EA 2656, I.F.R. 23), Université de Rouen, U.F.R. Médecine-Pharmacie, 76183 Rouen Cedex, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A multilocus sequence typing (MLST) scheme was developed to study the genetic relationships and population structure of 72
Clostridium difficile
isolates from various hosts, geographic sources, PCR ribotypes, and toxigenic types (determined by PCR targeting
tcdA
and
tcdB
genes). MLST was performed by DNA sequence analysis of seven housekeeping genes (
aroE
,
ddl
,
dutA
,
tpi
,
recA
,
gmk
, and
sodA
). The number of alleles ranged from five (
dutA
and
ddl
) to eleven (
recA
). Allelic profiles allowed the definition of 34 different sequence types (STs). These STs lacked correlation with geographic source but were well correlated to toxigenic type. The dendrogram generated from a matrix of pairwise genetic distances showed that animal isolates did not constitute a distinct lineage from human isolates and that there was no hypervirulent lineage within the population of toxigenic human isolates (isolates recovered from pseudomembranous colitis and antibiotic-associated diarrhea did not cluster in distinct lineages). However, A
−
B
+
variant isolates shared the same ST that appeared as a divergent lineage in the population studied, indicating a single evolutionary origin. The population structure was further examined by analysis of allelic polymorphism. The dendrogram generated from composite sequence-based analysis revealed a homogeneous population associated with three divergent lineages, one of which was restricted to A
−
B
+
variant isolates.
C. difficile
exhibited a clonal population structure, as revealed by the estimation of linkage disequilibrium (
Ia
) between loci. The analysis of alleles within clonal complexes estimated that point mutation generated new alleles at a frequency eightfold higher than recombinational exchange, and the congruence of the dendrograms generated from separate housekeeping loci confirmed the mutational evolution of this species.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
129 articles.
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