Snapshot of moving and expanding clones of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and their global distribution assessed by spoligotyping in an international study

被引:197
作者
Filliol, I
Driscoll, JR
van Soolingen, D
Kreiswirth, BN
Kremer, K
Valétudie, G
Anh, DD
Barlow, R
Banerjee, D
Bifani, PJ
Brudey, K
Cataldi, A
Cooksey, RC
Cousins, DV
Dale, JW
Dellagostin, OA
Drobniewski, F
Engelmann, G
Ferdinand, S
Gascoyne-Binzi, D
Gordon, M
Gutierrez, MC
Haas, WH
Heersma, H
Kassa-Kelembho, E
Ly, HM
Makristathis, A
Mammina, C
Martin, G
Moström, P
Mokrousov, I
Narbonne, V
Narvskaya, O
Nastasi, A
Niobe-Eyangoh, SN
Pape, JW
Rasolofo-Razanamparany, V
Ridell, M
Rossetti, ML
Stauffer, F
Suffys, PN
Takiff, H
Texier-Maugein, J
Vincent, V
de Waard, JH
Sola, C [1 ]
Rastogi, N
机构
[1] Inst Pasteur Guadeloupe, Unite TB & Mycobacterias, Morne Joliviere,BP 484, F-97165 Pointe a Pitre, Guadeloupe, France
[2] New York State Dept Hlth, Wadsworth Ctr, Albany, NY 12201 USA
[3] Publ Hlth Res Inst, TB Ctr, Newark, NJ USA
[4] Diag Lab Infect Dis, Bilthoven, Netherlands
[5] Perinatal Screening RIVM, Bilthoven, Netherlands
[6] Natl Inst Hyg & Epidemiol, Hanoi, Vietnam
[7] Leeds Gen Infirm, Dept Microbiol, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England
[8] St George Hosp, Sch Med, London, England
[9] Dulwich Hosp, PHLS, Mycobacterium Reference Unit, London SE22 8PT, England
[10] Univ Surrey, Guildford GU2 5XH, Surrey, England
[11] INTA, Inst Biotechnol, Moron, Argentina
[12] Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, TB Mycobacteriol Branch, Atlanta, GA USA
[13] Australian Reference Lab Bovine TB, Dept Agr, S Perth, WA, Australia
[14] Univ Fed Pelotas, Ctr Biotechnol, Pelotas, Brazil
[15] Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil
[16] Inst Oswaldo Cruz, Dept Biochem & Mol Biol, FIOCRUZ, BR-20001 Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
[17] Heidelberg Univ, Childrens Hosp, D-6900 Heidelberg, Germany
[18] Robert Koch Inst, D-1000 Berlin, Germany
[19] Bundesinst Gesundheitlichen Verbraucherschutz & V, Jena, Germany
[20] Inst Pasteur, Ctr Natl Reference Mycobacteries, Paris, France
[21] CHU Brest, Bacteriol Lab, F-29285 Brest, France
[22] CHU Bordeaux, Bacteriol Lab, Bordeaux, France
[23] Inst Pasteur, Bangui, Cent Afr Republ
[24] Univ Vienna, Inst Hyg, Klin Mikrobiol, Vienna, Austria
[25] Bundesstaatliche Bakteriol Serolog Untersuchungst, Vienna, Austria
[26] Univ Palermo, Dept Hyg & Microbiol, Palermo, Italy
[27] Univ Florence, Dept Publ Hlth, Florence, Italy
[28] St Petersburg Pasteur Inst, Mol Microbiol Lab, St Petersburg, Russia
[29] INLR, Ctr Gheskio, Port Au Prince, Haiti
[30] Inst Pasteur Madagascar, Antananarivo, Madagascar
[31] Univ Gothenburg, Inst Med Microbiol & Immunol, Gothenburg, Sweden
[32] IVIC, Ctr Microbiol & Biol Celular, Genet Mol Lab, Caracas, Venezuela
[33] Inst Biomed, TB Lab, Caracas, Venezuela
关键词
D O I
10.1128/JCM.41.5.1963-1970.2003
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
The present update on the global distribution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex spoligotypes provides both the octal and binary descriptions of the spoligotypes for M. tuberculosis complex, including Mycobacterium bovis, from >90 countries (13,008 patterns grouped into 813 shared types containing 11,708 isolates and 1,300 orphan patterns). A number of potential indices were developed to summarize the information on the biogeographical specificity of a given shared type, as well as its geographical spreading (matching code and spreading index, respectively). To facilitate the analysis of hundreds of spoligotypes each made up of a binary succession of 43 bits of information, a number of major and minor visual rules were also defined. A total of six major rules (A to F) with the precise description of the extra missing spacers (minor rules) were used to define 36 major clades (or families) of M. tuberculosis. Some major clades identified were the East African-Indian (EAI) clade, the Beijing clade, the Haarlem clade, the Latin American and Mediterranean (LAM) clade, the Central Asian (CAS) clade, a European clade of IS6110 low banders (X; highly prevalent in the United States and United Kingdom), and a widespread yet poorly defined clade (T). When the visual rules defined above were used for an automated labeling of the 813 shared types to define nine superfamilies of strains (Mycobacterium africanum, Beijing, M. bovis, EAI, CAS, T, Haarlem, X, and LAM), 96.9% of the shared types received a label, showing the potential for automated labeling of M. tuberculosis families in well-defined phylogeographical families. Intercontinental matches of shared types among eight continents and subcontinents (Africa, North America, Central America, South America, Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia, and the Far East) are analyzed and discussed.
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收藏
页码:1963 / 1970
页数:8
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