| Literature DB >> 23209821 |
Nina Cramer1, Lutz Wiehlmann, Oana Ciofu, Stephanie Tamm, Niels Høiby, Burkhard Tümmler.
Abstract
BACKGROUND/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23209821 PMCID: PMC3508996 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0050731
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Distribution of CF airway isolates in the P. aeruginosa population.
A. Clonal complex structures of 955 P. aeruginosa strains collected from individuals with cystic fibrosis (red), other human infections (green) and from the inanimate environment (blue). The diameter of the circle is proportional to the number of isolates with this genotype. Clonal complexes were calculated from the 15-marker genotype of the core genome by the eBurst algorithm. The ten most frequent clones are marked by their hexadecimal code. ExoU- and exoS-positive clones that share the same 15-marker genotype such as F469 and F46A or 2C22 and 2C2A are lumped together. B. Localization of the genotypes of the serial isolates collected from individuals with CF from the Hanover (H1-H35) and Copenhagen clinics (K1-K12) mapped onto the overall population structure (Fig. 1A) shown in the background. Persistent clones are marked in bold font, sporadic clones are shown in italics.
Figure 2Venn diagram of the number of P. aeruginosa genotypes retrieved from patients with CF, other human infections and the inanimate environment.
The intersections indicate the number of shared clones.
Figure 3Longitudinal follow-up of P. aeruginosa genotypes in CF lungs.
Course of chronic airway infections with P. aeruginosa since onset of colonization in patients with CF seen at the CF clinics Hannover (H1– H35, Fig. 3A) and Copenhagen (K1– K12, Fig. 3B). The most common clones are marked in different colours (eight for Hannover and four for Copenhagen), all other clones are marked in grey (Hanover: black = clone C40A, light green = clone 7C9A, light blue = clone 3C2A, orange = clone 1BAE, pink = clone 6D92, blue = clone D421, brown = clone 0C2E, purple = clone AC9A; Copenhagen: red = clone 6822, green = clone 4022, brown = clone 2C22, blue = clone AE9A). If no isolates were available from the Hannover CF clinic in 2010, patients had previously moved to another region (H2, H22, H23, H24, H27, H30, H31, H32), had passed away or had received a lung transplantation (H1, H3, H4, H11, H13, H14, H19, H26, H28, H29). Patients H33, H34 and H35 were only transiently colonized with P. aeruginosa. At the Copenhagen clinic 5 patients got a lung transplantation between 1996 and 2004, 5 other patients died (1999–2008). One of the deceased patients had also a lung transplantation, so that in total 9 patients have either died or received a lung transplantation.
Figure 4Diverging epidemiology of the P. aeruginosa infection at two CF centers.
Cumulative comparison of the course of the infection with P. aeruginosa in the patient cohorts from the CF clinics Hannover and Copenhagen. A. Number of genotypes detected in the individual patients during the observation period. B. Persistance of the initially acquired clone. C. Frequency of co-colonizations with two or more clones during the observation period.
Figure 5Microevolution of the accessory genome.
The bars indicate the number of changes of markers of the accessory genome for each persistant clone (5 isolates or more) in patients H1– H23, H25– H32, K1– K7 and K9- K12. The number of changes was normalized by year and 100 isolates.
Figure 6Antipseudomonal chemotherapy at the two CF clinics Hanover and Copenhagen.
Number of the annual courses of intravenous antimicrobial chemotherapy administered to the 35 and 12 CF patients from the Hannover and Copenhagen clinics, respectively. The number of treated patients is indicated for each year below the abscissa. The various classes of antimicrobials are differentiated by colour.