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Population genomics of the food-borne pathogen Vibrio fluvialis reveals lineage associated pathogenicity-related genetic elements

Vibrio fluvialis is a food-borne pathogen with epidemic potential that causes cholera-like acute gastroenteritis and sometimes extraintestinal infections in humans. However, research on its genetic diversity and pathogenicity-related genetic elements based on whole genome sequences is lacking. In th...

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Autores principales: Zheng, Hongyuan, Huang, Yuanming, Liu, Ping, Yan, Lin, Zhou, Yanyan, Yang, Chao, Wu, Yarong, Qin, Jingliang, Guo, Yan, Pei, Xiaoyan, Guo, Yunchang, Cui, Yujun, Liang, Weili
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Microbiology Society 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8942032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35212619
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000769
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author Zheng, Hongyuan
Huang, Yuanming
Liu, Ping
Yan, Lin
Zhou, Yanyan
Yang, Chao
Wu, Yarong
Qin, Jingliang
Guo, Yan
Pei, Xiaoyan
Guo, Yunchang
Cui, Yujun
Liang, Weili
author_facet Zheng, Hongyuan
Huang, Yuanming
Liu, Ping
Yan, Lin
Zhou, Yanyan
Yang, Chao
Wu, Yarong
Qin, Jingliang
Guo, Yan
Pei, Xiaoyan
Guo, Yunchang
Cui, Yujun
Liang, Weili
author_sort Zheng, Hongyuan
collection PubMed
description Vibrio fluvialis is a food-borne pathogen with epidemic potential that causes cholera-like acute gastroenteritis and sometimes extraintestinal infections in humans. However, research on its genetic diversity and pathogenicity-related genetic elements based on whole genome sequences is lacking. In this study, we collected and sequenced 130 strains of V. fluvialis from 14 provinces of China, and also determined the susceptibility of 35 of the strains to 30 different antibiotics. Combined with 52 publicly available V. fluvialis genomes, we inferred the population structure and investigated the characteristics of pathogenicity-related factors. The V. fluvialis strains exhibited high levels of homologous recombination and were assigned to two major populations, VflPop1 and VflPop2, according to the different compositions of their gene pools. VflPop2 was subdivided into groups 2.1 and 2.2. Except for VflPop2.2, which consisted only of Asian strains, the strains in VflPop1 and VflPop2.1 were distributed in the Americas, Asia and Europe. Analysis of the pathogenicity potential of V. fluvialis showed that most of the identified virulence-related genes or gene clusters showed high prevalence in V. fluvialis , except for three mobile genetic elements: pBD146, ICEVflInd1 and MGIVflInd1, which were scattered in only a few strains. A total of 21 antimicrobial resistance genes were identified in the genomes of the 182 strains analysed in this study, and 19 (90%) of them were exclusively present in VflPop2. Notably, the tetracycline resistance-related gene tet(35) was present in 150 (95%) of the strains in VflPop2, and in only one (4%) strain in VflPop1, indicating it was population-specific. In total, 91% of the 35 selected strains showed resistance to cefazolin, indicating V. fluvialis has a high resistance rate to cefazolin. Among the 15 genomes that carried the previously reported drug resistance-related plasmid pBD146, 11 (73%) showed resistance to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, which we inferred was related to the presence of the dfr6 gene in the plasmid. On the basis of the population genomics analysis, the genetic diversity, population structure and distribution of pathogenicity-related factors of V. fluvialis were delineated in this study. The results will provide further clues regarding the evolution and pathogenic mechanisms of V. fluvialis , and improve our knowledge for the prevention and control of this pathogen.
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spelling pubmed-89420322022-03-29 Population genomics of the food-borne pathogen Vibrio fluvialis reveals lineage associated pathogenicity-related genetic elements Zheng, Hongyuan Huang, Yuanming Liu, Ping Yan, Lin Zhou, Yanyan Yang, Chao Wu, Yarong Qin, Jingliang Guo, Yan Pei, Xiaoyan Guo, Yunchang Cui, Yujun Liang, Weili Microb Genom Research Articles Vibrio fluvialis is a food-borne pathogen with epidemic potential that causes cholera-like acute gastroenteritis and sometimes extraintestinal infections in humans. However, research on its genetic diversity and pathogenicity-related genetic elements based on whole genome sequences is lacking. In this study, we collected and sequenced 130 strains of V. fluvialis from 14 provinces of China, and also determined the susceptibility of 35 of the strains to 30 different antibiotics. Combined with 52 publicly available V. fluvialis genomes, we inferred the population structure and investigated the characteristics of pathogenicity-related factors. The V. fluvialis strains exhibited high levels of homologous recombination and were assigned to two major populations, VflPop1 and VflPop2, according to the different compositions of their gene pools. VflPop2 was subdivided into groups 2.1 and 2.2. Except for VflPop2.2, which consisted only of Asian strains, the strains in VflPop1 and VflPop2.1 were distributed in the Americas, Asia and Europe. Analysis of the pathogenicity potential of V. fluvialis showed that most of the identified virulence-related genes or gene clusters showed high prevalence in V. fluvialis , except for three mobile genetic elements: pBD146, ICEVflInd1 and MGIVflInd1, which were scattered in only a few strains. A total of 21 antimicrobial resistance genes were identified in the genomes of the 182 strains analysed in this study, and 19 (90%) of them were exclusively present in VflPop2. Notably, the tetracycline resistance-related gene tet(35) was present in 150 (95%) of the strains in VflPop2, and in only one (4%) strain in VflPop1, indicating it was population-specific. In total, 91% of the 35 selected strains showed resistance to cefazolin, indicating V. fluvialis has a high resistance rate to cefazolin. Among the 15 genomes that carried the previously reported drug resistance-related plasmid pBD146, 11 (73%) showed resistance to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, which we inferred was related to the presence of the dfr6 gene in the plasmid. On the basis of the population genomics analysis, the genetic diversity, population structure and distribution of pathogenicity-related factors of V. fluvialis were delineated in this study. The results will provide further clues regarding the evolution and pathogenic mechanisms of V. fluvialis , and improve our knowledge for the prevention and control of this pathogen. Microbiology Society 2022-02-25 /pmc/articles/PMC8942032/ /pubmed/35212619 http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000769 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial License.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Zheng, Hongyuan
Huang, Yuanming
Liu, Ping
Yan, Lin
Zhou, Yanyan
Yang, Chao
Wu, Yarong
Qin, Jingliang
Guo, Yan
Pei, Xiaoyan
Guo, Yunchang
Cui, Yujun
Liang, Weili
Population genomics of the food-borne pathogen Vibrio fluvialis reveals lineage associated pathogenicity-related genetic elements
title Population genomics of the food-borne pathogen Vibrio fluvialis reveals lineage associated pathogenicity-related genetic elements
title_full Population genomics of the food-borne pathogen Vibrio fluvialis reveals lineage associated pathogenicity-related genetic elements
title_fullStr Population genomics of the food-borne pathogen Vibrio fluvialis reveals lineage associated pathogenicity-related genetic elements
title_full_unstemmed Population genomics of the food-borne pathogen Vibrio fluvialis reveals lineage associated pathogenicity-related genetic elements
title_short Population genomics of the food-borne pathogen Vibrio fluvialis reveals lineage associated pathogenicity-related genetic elements
title_sort population genomics of the food-borne pathogen vibrio fluvialis reveals lineage associated pathogenicity-related genetic elements
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8942032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35212619
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000769
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