| Literature DB >> 27349973 |
Lea M Sommer1, Mikkel Christian Alanin2, Rasmus L Marvig3,4, Kim Gjerum Nielsen5, Niels Høiby3,6, Christian von Buchwald2, Søren Molin1,7, Helle Krogh Johansen1,3.
Abstract
Infections with Pseudomonas aeruginosa increase morbidity in primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) and cystic fibrosis (CF) patients. Both diseases are associated with a defect of the mucociliary clearance; in PCD caused by non-functional cilia, in CF by changed mucus. Whole genome sequencing of P. aeruginosa isolates from CF patients has shown that persistence of clonal lineages in the airways is facilitated by genetic adaptation. It is unknown whether this also applies to P. aeruginosa airway infections in PCD. We compared within-host evolution of P. aeruginosa in PCD and CF patients. P. aeruginosa isolates from 12 PCD patients were whole genome sequenced and phenotypically characterised. Ten out of 12 PCD patients were infected with persisting clone types. We identified convergent evolution in eight genes, which are also important for persistent infections in CF airways: genes related to antibiotic resistance, quorum sensing, motility, type III secretion and mucoidity. We document phenotypic and genotypic parallelism in the evolution of P. aeruginosa across infected patients with different genetic disorders. The parallel changes and convergent adaptation and evolution may be caused by similar selective forces such as the intensive antibiotic treatment and the inflammatory response, which drive the evolutionary processes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27349973 PMCID: PMC4923847 DOI: 10.1038/srep28732
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Patient and isolate overview.
(A) Genotypic characterisation. “First PA (Pseudomonas aeruginosa)” shows the year the patients had the first culture of P. aeruginosa. Isolates denoted by “X” were not sequenced. (B) Phenotypic characterisation. The phenotypic characteristics are shown for 41 isolates sampled at the same time points as indicated by isolates in (A). When phenotypic boxes are close together isolates were sampled from the same sputum sample (se legends to Fig. 1A). A grey box indicates a non-characterisable phenotype (N/A), white indicates the absense of a phenotype, and coloured boxes indicate the presence of a phenotype.
Figure 2Genes mutated in more clones than would be expected by genetic drift.
(A) Overview of the number of clones observed to be mutated in each gene, and the enrichment of genes mutated relative to expectance (p < 0.0001). (B) Overlap of the genes found to be important for the adaptation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to the PCD airways, and genes found important for the adaptation to CF airways in three other studies: Smith (2006)16, Marvig (2013)15, and Marvig (2015)17. It should also be noted, that even though the genes lasR and mucA are not on the pathoadaptive gene list of Marvig (2013)15, they were found to have been mutated in all isolates; however, the mutations had happened in an ancestor isolate.
Figure 3Biofilm production (attachment assay).
Bar plot of the biofilm production of the first and last isolate from each patient (from Fig. 1A), including PAO1 as control, *p < 0.01 and R2 > 0.75 linear regression with Bonferroni correction for multiple testing. Error bars: Standard error of the mean (SEM) (SD/square root (n), n = number of samples), numbers in parenthesis below the patient IDs represent the number of years between the first and last isolate for each of the patients.