| Literature DB >> 31623552 |
Hirokazu Yano1, Haruo Suzuki2, Fumito Maruyama3, Tomotada Iwamoto4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rapid identification of lineage remains a challenge in the genotyping of clinical isolates of recombinogenic pathogens. The chromosome of Mycobacterium avium subsp. hominissuis (MAH), an agent of Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) lung disease, is often mosaic and is composed of chromosomal segments originating from different lineages. This makes it difficult to infer the MAH lineage in a simple experimental set-up. To overcome this difficulty, we sought to identify chromosomal marker genes containing lineage-specific alleles by genome data mining.Entities:
Keywords: BAPS; Genetic population structure; Genotyping; MAC; MLVA; Marker gene; Mycobacterium; NTM; SNP; VNTR
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31623552 PMCID: PMC6798384 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-019-6078-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1Admixture analysis for the genomes of 125 global isolates. Genetic populations and admixture were inferred using BAPS version 6.0 [31]
Fig. 2MAH lineages in global MAH population. a Complete linkage clustering of 125 isolates based on genetic linkage. The distance is based on 1 – PSA (see main text). Isolate names are shown as a distinct color per lineage, b Visualization of recent imports inferred by fastGEAR [32]. Color of the chromosomal chunks indicates donor lineage of the chunk, c Recombination intensity inferred by OrderedPainting [33]. Recombination-cold regions are shown s horizontal bars, d Genomic location of known and new marker genes. Red: VNTR locus, Blue: genes used in SNP-based typing. Marker gene information was collected from [16, 24, 34]
Fig. 3Chromosomal loci carrying lineage-specific alleles. a Maximum likelihood tree based on the MAH_0788 ortholog alignment. GTR + G was used as the model. Truncated entries were removed upon construction of the tree, b Polymorphic sites in the alignment of MAH_0788 orthologs. Variation was not detected among the members of SC2 and SC4, c Maximum likelihood tree based on the alignment of the MAV_1375 ortholog. GTR + G was used as the model, d Selected polymorphic sites in the alignment of the MAV_1375 ortholog
Features of MAH lineages
| Lineage | Major isolation countries1 | Host or niche2 | Notable feature of the chromosome |
|---|---|---|---|
| EA1 | Japan, Korea | Human adult3, bathroom5 | Highly mosaic |
| EA2 | Japan, Korea | Human adult3, bathroom5 | Relatively few imports, inversion4 |
| SC1 | USA | Little information | Little information |
| SC2 | Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, Russia, USA, Japan (pig isolates) | Human adult3 and child, soil, dust, pig | Relatively few imports |
| SC3 | USA, Germany | Animals, water, soil, human | Highly mosaic |
| SC4 | Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, Russia, USA, Japan (pig isolates) | Animals, soil, dust, human adult and child | Close relative of SC2, highly mosaic |
1. Apart from the present study, the lineages of human isolates in Korea, Russia, and the Netherlands, and isolates from bathrooms and pigs in Japan were deduced previously using BAPS mixture analysis based on 14 loci MLVA data [21, 27, 38, 39]
2. Hosts and niches of sequenced isolates are shown in Additional file 1: Table S1
3. Uchiya et al [40] reported a significant difference in antibiotic susceptibility between EA1, EA2, and SC2 human isolates
4. Uchiya et al [37] reported a difference in chromosome structure between TH135 (EA2) and Mah104 (SC2)
5. Arikawa et al [10] reported the presence of MAH in the bathrooms of healthy volunteers