Literature DB >> 27746295

Turkish and Japanese Mycobacterium tuberculosis sublineages share a remote common ancestor.

Guislaine Refrégier1, Edgar Abadia2, Tomoshige Matsumoto3, Hiromi Ano3, Tetsuya Takashima3, Izuo Tsuyuguchi3, Elif Aktas4, Füsun Cömert5, Michel Kireopori Gomgnimbou6, Stefan Panaiotov7, Jody Phelan8, Francesc Coll8, Ruth McNerney9, Arnab Pain10, Taane G Clark8, Christophe Sola6.   

Abstract

Two geographically distant M. tuberculosis sublineages, Tur from Turkey and T3-Osaka from Japan, exhibit partially identical genotypic signatures (identical 12-loci MIRU-VNTR profiles, distinct spoligotyping patterns). We investigated T3-Osaka and Tur sublineages characteristics and potential genetic relatedness, first using MIRU-VNTR locus analysis on 21 and 25 samples of each sublineage respectively, and second comparing Whole Genome Sequences of 8 new samples to public data from 45 samples uncovering human tuberculosis diversity. We then tried to date their Most Recent Common Ancestor (MRCA) using three calibrations of SNP accumulation rate (long-term=0.03SNP/genome/year, derived from a tuberculosis ancestor of around 70,000years old; intermediate=0.2SNP/genome/year derived from a Peruvian mummy; short-term=0.5SNP/genome/year). To disentangle between these scenarios, we confronted the corresponding divergence times with major human history events and knowledge on human genetic divergence. We identified relatively high intrasublineage diversity for both T3-Osaka and Tur. We definitively proved their monophyly; the corresponding super-sublineage (referred to as "T3-Osa-Tur") shares a common ancestor with T3-Ethiopia and Ural sublineages but is only remotely related to other Euro-American sublineages such as X, LAM, Haarlem and S. The evolutionary scenario based on long-term evolution rate being valid until T3-Osa-Tur MRCA was not supported by Japanese fossil data. The evolutionary scenario relying on short-term evolution rate since T3-Osa-Tur MRCA was contradicted by human history and potential traces of past epidemics. T3-Osaka and Tur sublineages were found likely to have diverged between 800y and 2000years ago, potentially at the time of Mongol Empire. Altogether, this study definitively proves a strong genetic link between Turkish and Japanese tuberculosis. It provides a first hypothesis for calibrating TB Euro-American lineage molecular clock; additional studies are needed to reliably date events corresponding to intermediate depths in tuberculosis phylogeny. Copyright Â
© 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Molecular clock; Pathogen evolution; Phylogenetics; Phylogeography

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27746295     DOI: 10.1016/j.meegid.2016.10.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infect Genet Evol        ISSN: 1567-1348            Impact factor:   3.342


  3 in total

1.  Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex genotypes circulating in Nigeria based on spoligotyping obtained from Ziehl-Neelsen stained slides extracted DNA.

Authors:  Barbara Molina-Moya; Michel K Gomgnimbou; Lizania Spinasse; Joshua Obasanya; Olanrewaju Oladimeji; Russell Dacombe; Thomas Edwards; Xavier-Olessa Daragon; Lovett Lawson; Saddiq T Abdurrahman; Luis E Cuevas; Jose Dominguez; Christophe Sola
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2018-02-15

2.  New epidemic cluster of pre-extensively drug resistant isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Ural family emerging in Eastern Europe.

Authors:  Viacheslav Sinkov; Oleg Ogarkov; Igor Mokrousov; Yuri Bukin; Svetlana Zhdanova; Scott K Heysell
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2018-10-22       Impact factor: 3.969

3.  Connection between two historical tuberculosis outbreak sites in Japan, Honshu, by a new ancestral Mycobacterium tuberculosis L2 sublineage.

Authors:  Christophe Guyeux; Gaetan Senelle; Guislaine Refrégier; Florence Bretelle-Establet; Emmanuelle Cambau; Christophe Sola
Journal:  Epidemiol Infect       Date:  2022-01-19       Impact factor: 2.451

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.