Diversity and Population Overlap between Avian and Human Escherichia coli Belonging to Sequence Type 95

APEC causes a range of infections in poultry, collectively called colibacillosis, and is the leading cause of mortality and is associated with major economic significance in the poultry industry. A growing number of studies have suggested APEC as an external reservoir of human ExPEC, including UPEC,...

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Main Authors: Steffen L. Jørgensen, Marc Stegger, Eglé Kudirkiene, Berit Lilje, Louise L. Poulsen, Troels Ronco, Teresa Pires Dos Santos, Kristoffer Kiil, Magne Bisgaard, Karl Pedersen, Lisa K. Nolan, Lance B. Price, Rikke H. Olsen, Paal S. Andersen, Henrik Christensen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2019-01-01
Series:mSphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00333-18
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spelling doaj-51f499231296454981696d123980027c2020-11-25T02:18:55ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymSphere2379-50422019-01-0141e00333-1810.1128/mSphere.00333-18Diversity and Population Overlap between Avian and Human Escherichia coli Belonging to Sequence Type 95Steffen L. JørgensenMarc SteggerEglé KudirkieneBerit LiljeLouise L. PoulsenTroels RoncoTeresa Pires Dos SantosKristoffer KiilMagne BisgaardKarl PedersenLisa K. NolanLance B. PriceRikke H. OlsenPaal S. AndersenHenrik ChristensenAPEC causes a range of infections in poultry, collectively called colibacillosis, and is the leading cause of mortality and is associated with major economic significance in the poultry industry. A growing number of studies have suggested APEC as an external reservoir of human ExPEC, including UPEC, which is a reservoir. ExPEC belonging to ST95 is considered one of the most important pathogens in both poultry and humans. This study is the first in-depth whole-genome-based comparison of ST95 E. coli which investigates both the core genomes as well as the accessory genomes of avian and human ExPEC. We demonstrated that multiple lineages of ExPEC belonging to ST95 exist, of which the majority may cause infection in humans, while only part of the ST95 cluster seem to be avian pathogenic. These findings further support the idea that urinary tract infections may be a zoonotic infection.Avian-pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) is a subgroup of extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC) presumed to be zoonotic and to represent an external reservoir for extraintestinal infections in humans, including uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) causing urinary tract infections. Comparative genomics has previously been applied to investigate whether APEC and human ExPEC are distinct entities. Even so, whole-genome-based studies are limited, and large-scale comparisons focused on single sequence types (STs) are not available yet. In this study, comparative genomic analysis was performed on 323 APEC and human ExPEC genomes belonging to sequence type 95 (ST95) to investigate whether APEC and human ExPEC are distinct entities. Our study showed that APEC of ST95 did not constitute a unique ExPEC branch and was genetically diverse. A large genetic overlap between APEC and certain human ExPEC was observed, with APEC located on multiple branches together with closely related human ExPEC, including nearly identical APEC and human ExPEC. These results illustrate that certain ExPEC clones may indeed have the potential to cause infection in both poultry and humans. Previously described ExPEC-associated genes were found to be encoded on ColV plasmids. These virulence-associated plasmids seem to be crucial for ExPEC strains to cause avian colibacillosis and are strongly associated with strains of the mixed APEC/human ExPEC clusters. The phylogenetic analysis revealed two distinct branches consisting of exclusively closely related human ExPEC which did not carry the virulence-associated plasmids, emphasizing a lower avian virulence potential of human ExPEC in relation to an avian host.https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00333-18E. coligenomicspathogenicitysequencingzoonosis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Steffen L. Jørgensen
Marc Stegger
Eglé Kudirkiene
Berit Lilje
Louise L. Poulsen
Troels Ronco
Teresa Pires Dos Santos
Kristoffer Kiil
Magne Bisgaard
Karl Pedersen
Lisa K. Nolan
Lance B. Price
Rikke H. Olsen
Paal S. Andersen
Henrik Christensen
spellingShingle Steffen L. Jørgensen
Marc Stegger
Eglé Kudirkiene
Berit Lilje
Louise L. Poulsen
Troels Ronco
Teresa Pires Dos Santos
Kristoffer Kiil
Magne Bisgaard
Karl Pedersen
Lisa K. Nolan
Lance B. Price
Rikke H. Olsen
Paal S. Andersen
Henrik Christensen
Diversity and Population Overlap between Avian and Human Escherichia coli Belonging to Sequence Type 95
mSphere
E. coli
genomics
pathogenicity
sequencing
zoonosis
author_facet Steffen L. Jørgensen
Marc Stegger
Eglé Kudirkiene
Berit Lilje
Louise L. Poulsen
Troels Ronco
Teresa Pires Dos Santos
Kristoffer Kiil
Magne Bisgaard
Karl Pedersen
Lisa K. Nolan
Lance B. Price
Rikke H. Olsen
Paal S. Andersen
Henrik Christensen
author_sort Steffen L. Jørgensen
title Diversity and Population Overlap between Avian and Human Escherichia coli Belonging to Sequence Type 95
title_short Diversity and Population Overlap between Avian and Human Escherichia coli Belonging to Sequence Type 95
title_full Diversity and Population Overlap between Avian and Human Escherichia coli Belonging to Sequence Type 95
title_fullStr Diversity and Population Overlap between Avian and Human Escherichia coli Belonging to Sequence Type 95
title_full_unstemmed Diversity and Population Overlap between Avian and Human Escherichia coli Belonging to Sequence Type 95
title_sort diversity and population overlap between avian and human escherichia coli belonging to sequence type 95
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mSphere
issn 2379-5042
publishDate 2019-01-01
description APEC causes a range of infections in poultry, collectively called colibacillosis, and is the leading cause of mortality and is associated with major economic significance in the poultry industry. A growing number of studies have suggested APEC as an external reservoir of human ExPEC, including UPEC, which is a reservoir. ExPEC belonging to ST95 is considered one of the most important pathogens in both poultry and humans. This study is the first in-depth whole-genome-based comparison of ST95 E. coli which investigates both the core genomes as well as the accessory genomes of avian and human ExPEC. We demonstrated that multiple lineages of ExPEC belonging to ST95 exist, of which the majority may cause infection in humans, while only part of the ST95 cluster seem to be avian pathogenic. These findings further support the idea that urinary tract infections may be a zoonotic infection.Avian-pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) is a subgroup of extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC) presumed to be zoonotic and to represent an external reservoir for extraintestinal infections in humans, including uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) causing urinary tract infections. Comparative genomics has previously been applied to investigate whether APEC and human ExPEC are distinct entities. Even so, whole-genome-based studies are limited, and large-scale comparisons focused on single sequence types (STs) are not available yet. In this study, comparative genomic analysis was performed on 323 APEC and human ExPEC genomes belonging to sequence type 95 (ST95) to investigate whether APEC and human ExPEC are distinct entities. Our study showed that APEC of ST95 did not constitute a unique ExPEC branch and was genetically diverse. A large genetic overlap between APEC and certain human ExPEC was observed, with APEC located on multiple branches together with closely related human ExPEC, including nearly identical APEC and human ExPEC. These results illustrate that certain ExPEC clones may indeed have the potential to cause infection in both poultry and humans. Previously described ExPEC-associated genes were found to be encoded on ColV plasmids. These virulence-associated plasmids seem to be crucial for ExPEC strains to cause avian colibacillosis and are strongly associated with strains of the mixed APEC/human ExPEC clusters. The phylogenetic analysis revealed two distinct branches consisting of exclusively closely related human ExPEC which did not carry the virulence-associated plasmids, emphasizing a lower avian virulence potential of human ExPEC in relation to an avian host.
topic E. coli
genomics
pathogenicity
sequencing
zoonosis
url https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00333-18
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