| Literature DB >> 36003217 |
Jennifer Mattock1,2, Anthony M Smith3, Karen H Keddy4, Emma J Manners1,5, Sanelisiwe T Duze6, Shannon Smouse3, Nomsa Tau3, David Baker7, Marie Anne Chattaway8, Alison E Mather7,9, John Wain1,7, Gemma C Langridge7.
Abstract
Salmonella Infantis is presenting an increasing risk to public health. Of particular concern are the reports of pESI, a multidrug resistance (MDR) encoding megaplasmid, in isolates from multiple countries, but little is known about its presence or diversity in South Africa. Whole genome sequences of 387 S. Infantis isolates from South Africa (2004-2020) were analysed for genetic phylogeny, recombination frequency, antimicrobial resistance (AMR) determinants, plasmid presence and overall gene content. The population structure of South African S. Infantis was substantially different to S. Infantis reported elsewhere; only two thirds of isolates belonged to eBG31, while the remainder were identified as eBG297, a much rarer group globally. Significantly higher levels of recombination were observed in the eBG297 isolates, which was associated with the presence of prophages. The majority of isolates were putatively susceptible to antimicrobials (335/387) and lacked any plasmids (311/387); the megaplasmid pESI was present in just one isolate. A larger proportion of eBG31 isolates, 19% (49/263), contained at least one AMR determinant, compared to eBG297 at 2% (3/124). Comparison of the pan-genomes of isolates from either eBG identified 943 genes significantly associated with eBG, with 43 found exclusively in eBG31 isolates and 34 in eBG297 isolates. This, along with the single nucleotide polymorphism distance and difference in resistance profiles, suggests that eBG31 and eBG297 isolates occupy different niches within South Africa. If antibiotic-resistant S. Infantis emerges in South Africa, probably through the spread of the pESI plasmid, treatment of this infection would be compromised.Entities:
Keywords: AMR; Salmonella Infantis; eBG297; eBG31
Year: 2022 PMID: 36003217 PMCID: PMC9394735 DOI: 10.1099/acmi.0.000371
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Access Microbiol ISSN: 2516-8290
Fig. 1.Phylogenetic relationship of eBGs in South Africa. Inner ring, eBG: eBG31 (n=262), eBG297 (n=124), eBG8 (n=4). Outer ring, source: stool (n=348), blood (n=27), urine (n=10), CSF (n=3), other (n=2). Maximum-likelihood core SNP phylogeny of 386 S. Infantis isolates. Isolates belonging to eBG297 comprised 32 % (124/387) of the S. Infantis sequences. The median pairwise SNP distance between the eBG31 and eBG297 sequences was 1086. The distance between eBG8 and the S. Infantis sequences was four times greater, at 4212 with eBG31 and 4399 with eBG297.
Fig. 2.Distribution in the amount of recombination between eBGs in South Africa. Box and whisker plot of the number of bases of recombination in isolates from eBG31 (n=263), eBG297 (n=124) and eBG297 with prophages masked. Significantly more recombination was present in eBG297 isolates compared to eBG31 (P<0.003). This can be attributed to prophages in the eBG297 isolates as masking them significantly decreased the amount of recombination (P<2.2×10−16).
Fig. 3.Resistance profile of S. Infantis isolates containing AMR determinants. UPGMA dendrogram based on the distance matrix of AMR determinant presence/absence and heatmap of the 49 eBG31 and three eBG297 isolates that contained at least one AMR determinant.
Fig. 4.Comparison of the pangenome between eBG31 and eBG297. Venn diagram of the number of genes shared between and unique to 263 eBG31 isolates and 124 eBG297 isolates.