Holden_2009_PLoS.ONE_4_E6072

Reference

Title : Rapid evolution of virulence and drug resistance in the emerging zoonotic pathogen Streptococcus suis - Holden_2009_PLoS.One_4_e6072
Author(s) : Holden MT , Hauser H , Sanders M , Ngo TH , Cherevach I , Cronin A , Goodhead I , Mungall K , Quail MA , Price C , Rabbinowitsch E , Sharp S , Croucher NJ , Chieu TB , Mai NT , Diep TS , Chinh NT , Kehoe M , Leigh JA , Ward PN , Dowson CG , Whatmore AM , Chanter N , Iversen P , Gottschalk M , Slater JD , Smith HE , Spratt BG , Xu J , Ye C , Bentley S , Barrell BG , Schultsz C , Maskell DJ , Parkhill J
Ref : PLoS ONE , 4 :e6072 , 2009
Abstract :

BACKGROUND: Streptococcus suis is a zoonotic pathogen that infects pigs and can occasionally cause serious infections in humans. S. suis infections occur sporadically in human Europe and North America, but a recent major outbreak has been described in China with high levels of mortality. The mechanisms of S. suis pathogenesis in humans and pigs are poorly understood. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The sequencing of whole genomes of S. suis isolates provides opportunities to investigate the genetic basis of infection. Here we describe whole genome sequences of three S. suis strains from the same lineage: one from European pigs, and two from human cases from China and Vietnam. Comparative genomic analysis was used to investigate the variability of these strains. S. suis is phylogenetically distinct from other Streptococcus species for which genome sequences are currently available. Accordingly, approximately 40% of the approximately 2 Mb genome is unique in comparison to other Streptococcus species. Finer genomic comparisons within the species showed a high level of sequence conservation; virtually all of the genome is common to the S. suis strains. The only exceptions are three approximately 90 kb regions, present in the two isolates from humans, composed of integrative conjugative elements and transposons. Carried in these regions are coding sequences associated with drug resistance. In addition, small-scale sequence variation has generated pseudogenes in putative virulence and colonization factors. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The genomic inventories of genetically related S. suis strains, isolated from distinct hosts and diseases, exhibit high levels of conservation. However, the genomes provide evidence that horizontal gene transfer has contributed to the evolution of drug resistance.

PubMedSearch : Holden_2009_PLoS.One_4_e6072
PubMedID: 19603075
Gene_locus related to this paper: strsu-q302y4 , strsy-a4vus4 , strsy-a4vwf6

Related information

Gene_locus strsu-q302y4    strsy-a4vus4    strsy-a4vwf6

Citations formats

Holden MT, Hauser H, Sanders M, Ngo TH, Cherevach I, Cronin A, Goodhead I, Mungall K, Quail MA, Price C, Rabbinowitsch E, Sharp S, Croucher NJ, Chieu TB, Mai NT, Diep TS, Chinh NT, Kehoe M, Leigh JA, Ward PN, Dowson CG, Whatmore AM, Chanter N, Iversen P, Gottschalk M, Slater JD, Smith HE, Spratt BG, Xu J, Ye C, Bentley S, Barrell BG, Schultsz C, Maskell DJ, Parkhill J (2009)
Rapid evolution of virulence and drug resistance in the emerging zoonotic pathogen Streptococcus suis
PLoS ONE 4 :e6072

Holden MT, Hauser H, Sanders M, Ngo TH, Cherevach I, Cronin A, Goodhead I, Mungall K, Quail MA, Price C, Rabbinowitsch E, Sharp S, Croucher NJ, Chieu TB, Mai NT, Diep TS, Chinh NT, Kehoe M, Leigh JA, Ward PN, Dowson CG, Whatmore AM, Chanter N, Iversen P, Gottschalk M, Slater JD, Smith HE, Spratt BG, Xu J, Ye C, Bentley S, Barrell BG, Schultsz C, Maskell DJ, Parkhill J (2009)
PLoS ONE 4 :e6072