The predominance of Ethiopian specific Mycobacterium tuberculosis families and minimal contribution of Mycobacterium bovis in tuberculous lymphadenitis patients in Southwest Ethiopia

No === Background: Ethiopia has an extremely high rate of extrapulmonary tuberculosis, dominated by tuberculous lymphadenitis (TBLN). However, little is known about Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBc) lineages re-sponsible for TBLN in Southwest Ethiopia.Methods:A total of 304 MTBc isolates fro...

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Main Authors: Tadesse, M., Abebe, G., Bekele, A., Bezabih, M., de Rijk, P., Meehan, Conor J., de Jong, B.C., Rigouts, L.
Language:en
Published: 2019
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/17305
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spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-173052019-11-06T03:01:51Z The predominance of Ethiopian specific Mycobacterium tuberculosis families and minimal contribution of Mycobacterium bovis in tuberculous lymphadenitis patients in Southwest Ethiopia Tadesse, M. Abebe, G. Bekele, A. Bezabih, M. de Rijk, P. Meehan, Conor J. de Jong, B.C. Rigouts, L. Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mycobacterium bovis Tuberculous lymphadenitis Ethiopia No Background: Ethiopia has an extremely high rate of extrapulmonary tuberculosis, dominated by tuberculous lymphadenitis (TBLN). However, little is known about Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBc) lineages re-sponsible for TBLN in Southwest Ethiopia.Methods:A total of 304 MTBc isolates from TBLN patients in Southwest Ethiopia were genotyped primarily by spoligotyping. Isolates of selected spoligotypes were further analyzed by 15-loci mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit–variable number tandem repeat (MIRU-VNTR) (n = 167) and qPCR-based single nucleotide polymorphism (n = 38). Isolates were classified into main phylogenetic lineages and families by using the re-ference strain collections and identification tools available at MIRU-VNTRplus data base. Resistance to rifampicin was determined by Xpert MTB/RIF. Results: The majority of isolates (248; 81.6%) belonged to the Euro-American lineage (Lineage 4), with the ill-defined T and Haarlem as largest families comprising 116 (38.2%) and 43 (14.1%) isolates respectively. Of the T family, 108 isolates were classified as being part of the newly described Ethiopian families, namely Ethiopia_2(n = 44), Ethiopia_3 (n = 34) and Ethiopia_H37Rv-like (n = 30). Other sub-lineages included URAL (n = 18), S(n = 17), Uganda I (n = 16), LAM (n = 13), X (n = 5), TUR (n = 5), Uganda II (n = 4) and unknown (n = 19).Lineage 3 (Delhi/CAS) was the second most common lineage comprising 44 (14.5%) isolates. Interestingly, six isolates (2%) were belonged to Lineage 7, unique to Ethiopia. Lineage 1 (East-African Indian) and Lineage 2(Beijing) were represented by 3 and 1 isolates respectively.M. bovis was identified in only two (0.7%) TBLN cases. The cluster rate was highest for Ethiopia_3 isolates showing clonal similarity with isolates from North Ethiopia. Lineage 3 was significantly associated with rifampicin resistance. Conclusions: In TBLN in Southwest Ethiopia, the recently described Ethiopia specific Lineage 4 families were predominant, followed by Lineage 3 and Lineage 4-Haarlem. The contribution of M. bovis in TBLN infection is minimal. This work was supported by the Mycobacteriology Unit of Instituteof Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium and interuniversity coopera-tion between Jimma University and Flemish Universities (VLIR-OUSproject). 2019-09-24T10:46:05Z 2019-10-17T13:58:52Z 2019-09-24T10:46:05Z 2019-10-17T13:58:52Z 2017-11 2017-09-13 2017-09-15 2019-09-24T09:46:05Z Article No full-text in the repository Tadesse M, Abebe G, Bekele A et al (2017) The predominance of Ethiopian specific Mycobacterium tuberculosis families and minimal contribution of Mycobacterium bovis in tuberculous lymphadenitis patients in Southwest Ethiopia. Infection, Genetics and Evolution. 55: 251-259. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/17305 en https://doi.org/10.1016/j.meegid.2017.09.016
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Mycobacterium bovis
Tuberculous lymphadenitis
Ethiopia
spellingShingle Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Mycobacterium bovis
Tuberculous lymphadenitis
Ethiopia
Tadesse, M.
Abebe, G.
Bekele, A.
Bezabih, M.
de Rijk, P.
Meehan, Conor J.
de Jong, B.C.
Rigouts, L.
The predominance of Ethiopian specific Mycobacterium tuberculosis families and minimal contribution of Mycobacterium bovis in tuberculous lymphadenitis patients in Southwest Ethiopia
description No === Background: Ethiopia has an extremely high rate of extrapulmonary tuberculosis, dominated by tuberculous lymphadenitis (TBLN). However, little is known about Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBc) lineages re-sponsible for TBLN in Southwest Ethiopia.Methods:A total of 304 MTBc isolates from TBLN patients in Southwest Ethiopia were genotyped primarily by spoligotyping. Isolates of selected spoligotypes were further analyzed by 15-loci mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit–variable number tandem repeat (MIRU-VNTR) (n = 167) and qPCR-based single nucleotide polymorphism (n = 38). Isolates were classified into main phylogenetic lineages and families by using the re-ference strain collections and identification tools available at MIRU-VNTRplus data base. Resistance to rifampicin was determined by Xpert MTB/RIF. Results: The majority of isolates (248; 81.6%) belonged to the Euro-American lineage (Lineage 4), with the ill-defined T and Haarlem as largest families comprising 116 (38.2%) and 43 (14.1%) isolates respectively. Of the T family, 108 isolates were classified as being part of the newly described Ethiopian families, namely Ethiopia_2(n = 44), Ethiopia_3 (n = 34) and Ethiopia_H37Rv-like (n = 30). Other sub-lineages included URAL (n = 18), S(n = 17), Uganda I (n = 16), LAM (n = 13), X (n = 5), TUR (n = 5), Uganda II (n = 4) and unknown (n = 19).Lineage 3 (Delhi/CAS) was the second most common lineage comprising 44 (14.5%) isolates. Interestingly, six isolates (2%) were belonged to Lineage 7, unique to Ethiopia. Lineage 1 (East-African Indian) and Lineage 2(Beijing) were represented by 3 and 1 isolates respectively.M. bovis was identified in only two (0.7%) TBLN cases. The cluster rate was highest for Ethiopia_3 isolates showing clonal similarity with isolates from North Ethiopia. Lineage 3 was significantly associated with rifampicin resistance. Conclusions: In TBLN in Southwest Ethiopia, the recently described Ethiopia specific Lineage 4 families were predominant, followed by Lineage 3 and Lineage 4-Haarlem. The contribution of M. bovis in TBLN infection is minimal. === This work was supported by the Mycobacteriology Unit of Instituteof Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium and interuniversity coopera-tion between Jimma University and Flemish Universities (VLIR-OUSproject).
author Tadesse, M.
Abebe, G.
Bekele, A.
Bezabih, M.
de Rijk, P.
Meehan, Conor J.
de Jong, B.C.
Rigouts, L.
author_facet Tadesse, M.
Abebe, G.
Bekele, A.
Bezabih, M.
de Rijk, P.
Meehan, Conor J.
de Jong, B.C.
Rigouts, L.
author_sort Tadesse, M.
title The predominance of Ethiopian specific Mycobacterium tuberculosis families and minimal contribution of Mycobacterium bovis in tuberculous lymphadenitis patients in Southwest Ethiopia
title_short The predominance of Ethiopian specific Mycobacterium tuberculosis families and minimal contribution of Mycobacterium bovis in tuberculous lymphadenitis patients in Southwest Ethiopia
title_full The predominance of Ethiopian specific Mycobacterium tuberculosis families and minimal contribution of Mycobacterium bovis in tuberculous lymphadenitis patients in Southwest Ethiopia
title_fullStr The predominance of Ethiopian specific Mycobacterium tuberculosis families and minimal contribution of Mycobacterium bovis in tuberculous lymphadenitis patients in Southwest Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed The predominance of Ethiopian specific Mycobacterium tuberculosis families and minimal contribution of Mycobacterium bovis in tuberculous lymphadenitis patients in Southwest Ethiopia
title_sort predominance of ethiopian specific mycobacterium tuberculosis families and minimal contribution of mycobacterium bovis in tuberculous lymphadenitis patients in southwest ethiopia
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/17305
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