Cargando…
Long-range dispersal moved Francisella tularensis into Western Europe from the East
For many infections transmitting to humans from reservoirs in nature, disease dispersal patterns over space and time are largely unknown. Here, a reversed genomics approach helped us understand disease dispersal and yielded insight into evolution and biological properties of Francisella tularensis,...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Microbiology Society
2016
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5359409/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28348839 http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000100 |
_version_ | 1782516380517531648 |
---|---|
author | Dwibedi, Chinmay Birdsell, Dawn Lärkeryd, Adrian Myrtennäs, Kerstin Öhrman, Caroline Nilsson, Elin Karlsson, Edvin Hochhalter, Christian Rivera, Andrew Maltinsky, Sara Bayer, Brittany Keim, Paul Scholz, Holger C. Tomaso, Herbert Wittwer, Matthias Beuret, Christian Schuerch, Nadia Pilo, Paola Hernández Pérez, Marta Rodriguez-Lazaro, David Escudero, Raquel Anda, Pedro Forsman, Mats Wagner, David M. Larsson, Pär Johansson, Anders |
author_facet | Dwibedi, Chinmay Birdsell, Dawn Lärkeryd, Adrian Myrtennäs, Kerstin Öhrman, Caroline Nilsson, Elin Karlsson, Edvin Hochhalter, Christian Rivera, Andrew Maltinsky, Sara Bayer, Brittany Keim, Paul Scholz, Holger C. Tomaso, Herbert Wittwer, Matthias Beuret, Christian Schuerch, Nadia Pilo, Paola Hernández Pérez, Marta Rodriguez-Lazaro, David Escudero, Raquel Anda, Pedro Forsman, Mats Wagner, David M. Larsson, Pär Johansson, Anders |
author_sort | Dwibedi, Chinmay |
collection | PubMed |
description | For many infections transmitting to humans from reservoirs in nature, disease dispersal patterns over space and time are largely unknown. Here, a reversed genomics approach helped us understand disease dispersal and yielded insight into evolution and biological properties of Francisella tularensis, the bacterium causing tularemia. We whole-genome sequenced 67 strains and characterized by single-nucleotide polymorphism assays 138 strains, collected from individuals infected 1947-2012 across Western Europe. We used the data for phylogenetic, population genetic and geographical network analyses. All strains (n=205) belonged to a monophyletic population of recent ancestry not found outside Western Europe. Most strains (n=195) throughout the study area were assigned to a star-like phylogenetic pattern indicating that colonization of Western Europe occurred via clonal expansion. In the East of the study area, strains were more diverse, consistent with a founder population spreading from east to west. The relationship of genetic and geographic distance within the F. tularensis population was complex and indicated multiple long-distance dispersal events. Mutation rate estimates based on year of isolation indicated null rates; in outbreak hotspots only, there was a rate of 0.4 mutations/genome/year. Patterns of nucleotide substitution showed marked AT mutational bias suggestive of genetic drift. These results demonstrate that tularemia has moved from east to west in Europe and that F. tularensis has a biology characterized by long-range geographical dispersal events and mostly slow, but variable, replication rates. The results indicate that mutation-driven evolution, a resting survival phase, genetic drift and long-distance geographical dispersal events have interacted to generate genetic diversity within this species. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-5359409 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2016 |
publisher | Microbiology Society |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-53594092017-03-27 Long-range dispersal moved Francisella tularensis into Western Europe from the East Dwibedi, Chinmay Birdsell, Dawn Lärkeryd, Adrian Myrtennäs, Kerstin Öhrman, Caroline Nilsson, Elin Karlsson, Edvin Hochhalter, Christian Rivera, Andrew Maltinsky, Sara Bayer, Brittany Keim, Paul Scholz, Holger C. Tomaso, Herbert Wittwer, Matthias Beuret, Christian Schuerch, Nadia Pilo, Paola Hernández Pérez, Marta Rodriguez-Lazaro, David Escudero, Raquel Anda, Pedro Forsman, Mats Wagner, David M. Larsson, Pär Johansson, Anders Microb Genom Research Paper For many infections transmitting to humans from reservoirs in nature, disease dispersal patterns over space and time are largely unknown. Here, a reversed genomics approach helped us understand disease dispersal and yielded insight into evolution and biological properties of Francisella tularensis, the bacterium causing tularemia. We whole-genome sequenced 67 strains and characterized by single-nucleotide polymorphism assays 138 strains, collected from individuals infected 1947-2012 across Western Europe. We used the data for phylogenetic, population genetic and geographical network analyses. All strains (n=205) belonged to a monophyletic population of recent ancestry not found outside Western Europe. Most strains (n=195) throughout the study area were assigned to a star-like phylogenetic pattern indicating that colonization of Western Europe occurred via clonal expansion. In the East of the study area, strains were more diverse, consistent with a founder population spreading from east to west. The relationship of genetic and geographic distance within the F. tularensis population was complex and indicated multiple long-distance dispersal events. Mutation rate estimates based on year of isolation indicated null rates; in outbreak hotspots only, there was a rate of 0.4 mutations/genome/year. Patterns of nucleotide substitution showed marked AT mutational bias suggestive of genetic drift. These results demonstrate that tularemia has moved from east to west in Europe and that F. tularensis has a biology characterized by long-range geographical dispersal events and mostly slow, but variable, replication rates. The results indicate that mutation-driven evolution, a resting survival phase, genetic drift and long-distance geographical dispersal events have interacted to generate genetic diversity within this species. Microbiology Society 2016-12-12 /pmc/articles/PMC5359409/ /pubmed/28348839 http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000100 Text en © 2016 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. |
spellingShingle | Research Paper Dwibedi, Chinmay Birdsell, Dawn Lärkeryd, Adrian Myrtennäs, Kerstin Öhrman, Caroline Nilsson, Elin Karlsson, Edvin Hochhalter, Christian Rivera, Andrew Maltinsky, Sara Bayer, Brittany Keim, Paul Scholz, Holger C. Tomaso, Herbert Wittwer, Matthias Beuret, Christian Schuerch, Nadia Pilo, Paola Hernández Pérez, Marta Rodriguez-Lazaro, David Escudero, Raquel Anda, Pedro Forsman, Mats Wagner, David M. Larsson, Pär Johansson, Anders Long-range dispersal moved Francisella tularensis into Western Europe from the East |
title | Long-range dispersal moved Francisella tularensis into Western Europe from the East |
title_full | Long-range dispersal moved Francisella tularensis into Western Europe from the East |
title_fullStr | Long-range dispersal moved Francisella tularensis into Western Europe from the East |
title_full_unstemmed | Long-range dispersal moved Francisella tularensis into Western Europe from the East |
title_short | Long-range dispersal moved Francisella tularensis into Western Europe from the East |
title_sort | long-range dispersal moved francisella tularensis into western europe from the east |
topic | Research Paper |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5359409/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28348839 http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000100 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT dwibedichinmay longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT birdselldawn longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT larkerydadrian longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT myrtennaskerstin longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT ohrmancaroline longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT nilssonelin longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT karlssonedvin longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT hochhalterchristian longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT riveraandrew longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT maltinskysara longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT bayerbrittany longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT keimpaul longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT scholzholgerc longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT tomasoherbert longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT wittwermatthias longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT beuretchristian longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT schuerchnadia longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT pilopaola longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT hernandezperezmarta longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT rodriguezlazarodavid longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT escuderoraquel longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT andapedro longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT forsmanmats longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT wagnerdavidm longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT larssonpar longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast AT johanssonanders longrangedispersalmovedfrancisellatularensisintowesterneuropefromtheeast |