Comparative phylogenomics of Streptococcus pneumoniae isolated from invasive disease and nasopharyngeal carriage from West Africans
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BMC Genomics
Abstract
Background: We applied comparative phylogenomics (whole genome comparisons of microbes using DNA
microarrays combined with Bayesian-based phylogenies) to investigate S. pneumoniae isolates from West Africa,
with the aim of providing insights into the pathogenicity and other features related to the biology of the organism.
The strains investigated comprised a well defined collection of 58 invasive and carriage isolates that were
sequenced typed and included eight different S. pneumoniae serotypes (1, 3, 5, 6A, 11, 14, 19 F and 23 F) of varying
invasive disease potential.
Results: The core genome of the isolates was estimated to be 38% and was mainly represented by gene functional
categories associated with housekeeping functions. Comparison of the gene content of invasive and carriage
isolates identified at least eleven potential genes that may be important in virulence including surface proteins,
transport proteins, transcription factors and hypothetical proteins. Thirteen accessory regions (ARs) were also
identified and did not show any loci association with the eleven virulence genes. Intraclonal diversity (isolates of
the same serotype and MLST but expressing different patterns of ARs) was observed among some clones including
ST 1233 (serotype 5), ST 3404 (serotype 5) and ST 3321 (serotype 14). A constructed phylogenetic tree of the
isolates showed a high level of heterogeneity consistent with the frequent S. pneumoniae recombination. Despite
this, a homogeneous clustering of all the serotype 1 strains was observed.
Conclusions: Comparative phylogenomics of invasive and carriage S. pneumoniae isolates identified a number of
putative virulence determinants that may be important in the progression of S. pneumoniae from the carriage
phase to invasive disease. Virulence determinants that contribute to S. pneumoniae pathogenicity are likely to be
distributed randomly throughout its genome rather than being clustered in dedicated loci or islands. Compared to
other S. pneumoniae serotypes, serotype 1 appears most genetically uniform.
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Research Article