Author:
da Silva Kesia Esther,Tanmoy Arif Mohammad,Pragasam Agila Kumari,Iqbal Junaid,Islam Sajib Mohammad Saiful,Mutreja Ankur,Veeraraghavan Balaji,Tamrakar Dipesh,Qamar Farah Naz,Dougan Gordon,Bogoch Isaac,Seidman Jessica C,Shakya Jivan,Vaidya Krista,Carey Megan E.,Shrestha Rajeev,Irfan Seema,Baker Stephen,Luby Steve P.,Cao Yanjia,Dyson Zoe Anne,Garrett Denise O.,John Jacob,Kang Gagandeep,Hooda Yogesh,Saha Samir K.,Saha Senjuti,Andrews Jason R.
Abstract
AbstractThe emergence of increasingly antimicrobial-resistant (AMR) Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi (S. Typhi) threatens to undermine effective treatment and control. Here, aiming to investigate the temporal and geographic patterns of emergence and spread of AMR S. Typhi, we sequenced 3,489 S. Typhi isolated from prospective surveillance in South Asia and combined these with a global collection of 4,169 S. Typhi genomes. Our analysis revealed that independent acquisition of plasmids and homoplastic mutations conferring AMR have occurred repeatedly in multiple lineages of S. Typhi, predominantly arising in South Asia. We found evidence of frequent international and intercontinental transfers of AMR S. Typhi, followed by rapid expansion and replacement of antimicrobial-susceptible clades.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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