Determinants of the Sympatric Host-Pathogen Relationship in Tuberculosis.

Major contributions from pathogen genome analysis and host genetics have equated the possibility of Mycobacterium tuberculosis co-evolution with its human host leading to more stable sympatric host-pathogen relationships. However, the attribution to either sympatric or allopatric categories depends...

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Main Authors: Susana David, A R A Mateus, Elsa L Duarte, José Albuquerque, Clara Portugal, Luísa Sancho, João Lavinha, Guilherme Gonçalves
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4631367?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-71384ec676a14769bebcc14773a61f102020-11-24T21:39:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011011e014062510.1371/journal.pone.0140625Determinants of the Sympatric Host-Pathogen Relationship in Tuberculosis.Susana DavidA R A MateusElsa L DuarteJosé AlbuquerqueClara PortugalLuísa SanchoJoão LavinhaGuilherme GonçalvesMajor contributions from pathogen genome analysis and host genetics have equated the possibility of Mycobacterium tuberculosis co-evolution with its human host leading to more stable sympatric host-pathogen relationships. However, the attribution to either sympatric or allopatric categories depends on the resolution or grain of genotypic characterization. We explored the influence on the sympatric host-pathogen relationship of clinical (HIV infection and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis [MDRTB]) and demographic (gender and age) factors in regards to the genotypic grain by using spacer oligonucleotide typing (spoligotyping) for classification of M. tuberculosis strains within the Euro-American lineage. We analyzed a total of 547 tuberculosis (TB) cases, from six year consecutive sampling in a setting with high TB-HIV coinfection (32.0%). Of these, 62.0% were caused by major circulating pathogen genotypes. The sympatric relationship was defined according to spoligotype in comparison to the international spoligotype database SpolDB4. While no significant association with Euro-American lineage was observed with any of the factors analyzed, increasing the resolution with spoligotyping evidenced a significant association of MDRTB with sympatric strains, regardless of the HIV status. Furthermore, distribution curves of the prevalence of sympatric and allopatric TB in relation to patients' age showed an accentuation of the relevance of the age of onset in the allopatric relationship, as reflected in the trimodal distribution. On the contrary, sympatric TB was characterized by the tendency towards a typical (standard) distribution curve. Our results suggest that within the Euro-American lineage a greater degree of genotyping fine-tuning is necessary in modeling the biological processes behind the host-pathogen interplay. Furthermore, prevalence distribution of sympatric TB to age was suggestive of host genetic determinisms driven by more common variants.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4631367?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Susana David
A R A Mateus
Elsa L Duarte
José Albuquerque
Clara Portugal
Luísa Sancho
João Lavinha
Guilherme Gonçalves
spellingShingle Susana David
A R A Mateus
Elsa L Duarte
José Albuquerque
Clara Portugal
Luísa Sancho
João Lavinha
Guilherme Gonçalves
Determinants of the Sympatric Host-Pathogen Relationship in Tuberculosis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Susana David
A R A Mateus
Elsa L Duarte
José Albuquerque
Clara Portugal
Luísa Sancho
João Lavinha
Guilherme Gonçalves
author_sort Susana David
title Determinants of the Sympatric Host-Pathogen Relationship in Tuberculosis.
title_short Determinants of the Sympatric Host-Pathogen Relationship in Tuberculosis.
title_full Determinants of the Sympatric Host-Pathogen Relationship in Tuberculosis.
title_fullStr Determinants of the Sympatric Host-Pathogen Relationship in Tuberculosis.
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of the Sympatric Host-Pathogen Relationship in Tuberculosis.
title_sort determinants of the sympatric host-pathogen relationship in tuberculosis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Major contributions from pathogen genome analysis and host genetics have equated the possibility of Mycobacterium tuberculosis co-evolution with its human host leading to more stable sympatric host-pathogen relationships. However, the attribution to either sympatric or allopatric categories depends on the resolution or grain of genotypic characterization. We explored the influence on the sympatric host-pathogen relationship of clinical (HIV infection and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis [MDRTB]) and demographic (gender and age) factors in regards to the genotypic grain by using spacer oligonucleotide typing (spoligotyping) for classification of M. tuberculosis strains within the Euro-American lineage. We analyzed a total of 547 tuberculosis (TB) cases, from six year consecutive sampling in a setting with high TB-HIV coinfection (32.0%). Of these, 62.0% were caused by major circulating pathogen genotypes. The sympatric relationship was defined according to spoligotype in comparison to the international spoligotype database SpolDB4. While no significant association with Euro-American lineage was observed with any of the factors analyzed, increasing the resolution with spoligotyping evidenced a significant association of MDRTB with sympatric strains, regardless of the HIV status. Furthermore, distribution curves of the prevalence of sympatric and allopatric TB in relation to patients' age showed an accentuation of the relevance of the age of onset in the allopatric relationship, as reflected in the trimodal distribution. On the contrary, sympatric TB was characterized by the tendency towards a typical (standard) distribution curve. Our results suggest that within the Euro-American lineage a greater degree of genotyping fine-tuning is necessary in modeling the biological processes behind the host-pathogen interplay. Furthermore, prevalence distribution of sympatric TB to age was suggestive of host genetic determinisms driven by more common variants.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4631367?pdf=render
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