| Literature DB >> 34660341 |
Steffi Rocchi1,2, Thomas R Sewell3, Benoit Valot2, Chloé Godeau2, Audrey Laboissiere2, Laurence Millon1,2, Matthew C Fisher3.
Abstract
Resistance of the human pathogenic fungus Aspergillus fumigatus to antifungal agents is on the rise. However, links between patient infections, their potential acquisition from local environmental sources, and links to global diversity remain cryptic. Here, we used genotyping analyses using nine microsatellites in A. fumigatus, in order to study patterns of diversity in France. In this study, we genotyped 225 local A. fumigatus isolates, 112 azole susceptible and 113 azole resistant, collected from the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region (Eastern France) and sampled from both clinical (n = 34) and environmental (n = 191) sources. Azole-resistant clinical isolates (n = 29) were recovered mainly from cystic fibrosis patients and environmental isolates (n = 84) from market gardens and sawmills. In common with previous studies, the TR34/L98H allele predominated and comprised 80% of resistant isolates. The genotypes obtained for these local TR34/L98H isolates were integrated into a broader analysis including all genotypes for which data are available worldwide. We found that dominant local TR34/L98H genotypes were isolated in different sample types at different dates (different patients and types of environments) with hospital air and patient's isolates linked. Therefore, we are not able to rule out the possibility of some nosocomial transmission. We also found genotypes in these same environments to be highly diverse, emphasizing the highly mixed nature of A. fumigatus populations. Identical clonal genotypes were found to occur both in the French Eastern region and in the rest of the world (notably Australia), while others have not yet been observed and could be specific to our region. Our study demonstrates the need to integrate patient, healthcare, and environmental sampling with global databases in order to contextualize the local-scale epidemiology of antifungal resistant aspergillosis.Entities:
Keywords: Aspergillus fumigatus; TR34/L98H; azole resistant; genetic relatedness; microsatellites
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34660341 PMCID: PMC8512841 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.729476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Sequences of primers used for beta-tubulin and cyp51A and its promoter.
| Sequences | |||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Bt2a | 5′-GGTAACCAAATCGGTGCTGCTTTC-3′ | |
| Bt2b | 5′-ACCCTCAGTGTAGTGACCCTTGGC-3′ | ||
|
| Set 1 | PA5 | 5′-TCTCTGCACGCAAAGAAGAAC-3′ |
| PA7 | 5′-TCATATGTTGCTCAGCGG-3′ | ||
| Set 2 | AF306F | 5′-CACTGCAACTCTAATCCTCG-3′ | |
| AF855R | 5′-TAACGCAGACTGAGTCAAGC-3′ | ||
| Set 3 | AF766F | 5′-TTCGGATCGGACGTGGTGTA-3′ | |
| AF1330R | 5′-CGCTGATGGACGAAGACGAA-3′ | ||
| Set 4 | AF1179F | 5′-TGACGGTGACAAGGACTCTC-3′ | |
| AF1709R | 5′-ACAACCTCGTCGTTCTCCTG-3′ | ||
| Set 5 | AF1426F | 5′ AGTCTTCCTCCGCTCCAGTA-3′ | |
| AF2025R | 5′-ACACCTATTCCGATCACACC-3′ | ||
Figure 1Diagram with type of sampling, azole resistance, and cyp51A mutations of analyzed isolates.
Figure 2Circular dendrogram illustrating relationship among 113 azole-resistant (with details of tandem repeat and cyp51A SNP) and 112 azole-susceptible Aspergillus fumigatus, isolated from clinical or environmental samples. Genetic relationships are based on short tandem repeat at nine loci, using Bruvo’s distance and Neighbor-Joining clustering. The two most common multilocus genotypes (MLG) are denoted by the letters A and B Numbers are ID isolates. The stars provide information on the TR or SNP present on the cyp51A gene.
Genotypic richness, diversity, and evenness information for azole-susceptible and azole-resistant TR34/L98H isolates.
| Population |
| MLG | eMLG | Λ |
|
| E.5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Azole-susceptible isolates | 112 | 102 | 9.93 | 0.989 | 4.59 | 95.03 | 0.960 |
| Azole-resistant TR34/L98H isolates | 90 | 37 | 7.80 | 0.923 | 3.07 | 12.98 | 0.583 |
N, Number of individuals observed; MLG, Number of multilocus genotypes observed; eMLG, The number of expected MLG at the smallest sample size based on rarefaction; λ, Simpson’s Index; H, Shannon–Wiener Index; G, Stoddart and Taylor’s Index; E.5, Evenness mesure.
Multilocus genotypes (MLG) shared by isolates with TR34/L98H allele.
| MLG | Origin of sample | Type of patient or environment | Date of isolation | ID |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MLG A (17 isolates) | Clinic | Cystic fibrosis patient | 09/09/2015 | 1E002 |
| 13/12/2016 | 1E003 | |||
| 10/01/2017 | 1E014 | |||
| 1E015 | ||||
| 12/01/2017 | 1E016 | |||
| 17/01/2017 | 1E004 | |||
| 11/07/2017 | 1E013 | |||
| 12/07/2017 | 1E005 | |||
| 14/09/2017 | 1E071 | |||
| 10/11/2017 | 1E075 | |||
| Environment | Hospital (air) | 11/06/2015 | 1E024 | |
| 17/11/2017 | 1E078 | |||
| 10/04/2018 | 1E087 | |||
| Sawmill (soil) | 24/11/2014 | 2E007 | ||
| 16/02/2015 | 2E017 | |||
| 09/02/2016 | 2E008 | |||
| 06/04/2016 | 2E014 | |||
| MLG B (12 isolates) | Clinic | Hematology | 27/04/2012 | 1E021 |
| 11/05/2012 | 1E022 | |||
| Cystic fibrosis | 04/10/2016 | 1E001 | ||
| Environment | Hospital (air) | 17/10/2017 | 1E074 | |
| 21/11/2017 | 1E079 | |||
| Sawmill (soil) | 24/11/2014 | 2E006 | ||
| 14/01/2016 | 1E099 | |||
| 2E002 | ||||
| 31/03/2016 | 2E016 | |||
| 21/04/2016 | 2E011 | |||
| Market garden (soil) | 10/03/2017 | 1E069 | ||
| 1E070 | ||||
| MLG C (8 isolates) | Environment | Market garden (soil) | 07/03/2017 | 1E012 |
| 1E034 | ||||
| 1E038 | ||||
| 1E044 | ||||
| 1E050 | ||||
| 1E053 | ||||
| 1E058 | ||||
| 1E062 | ||||
| MLG D (6 isolates) | Environment | Market garden (soil) | 07/03/2017 | 1E033 |
| 1E036 | ||||
| 1E046 | ||||
| 1E047 | ||||
| 1E049 | ||||
| 1E051 | ||||
| MLG E (4 isolates) | Environment | Sawmill (soil) | 14/01/2016 | 1E100 |
| Market garden (soil) | 07/03/2017 | 1E006 | ||
| 1E037 | ||||
| 1E052 |
Date of isolation: Day/Month/Year.
Same cystic fibrosis chronically colonized APBA patient.
Two different cystic fibrosis patients.
In the same sawmill or market garden but different soil samples.
Same market garden, in six different soil samples coming from two different sites found 1.5 km apart.
Figure 3Minimum spanning network for TR34/L98H isolates (nine microsatellite loci STRAf using Bruvo’s distance, with distance cutoff < 0.2). Colors represent the origin of sampling and numbers are ID isolates. Link thickness is proportional to genotype similarity. The most common multilocus genotypes (MLG) are denoted by the letters A, B, C, D, and E.
Figure 4Minimum spanning network for TR34/L98H isolates (nine microsatellite loci STRAf using Bruvo’s distance, with distance cutoff < 0.2) from Besançon mycology team and from the world (AfumID application). Colors represent the origin of sampling and numbers are ID isolates. Link thickness is proportional to genotype similarity. The most common multilocus genotypes (MLGs) found in Besançon laboratory are denoted by the letters A, B, C, D, and E.