Genomic epidemiology of a national outbreak of post-surgical Mycobacterium abscessus wound infections in Brazil
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An epidemic of post-surgical wound infections, caused by a non-tuberculous mycobacterium, has been on-going in
Brazil. It has been unclear whether one or multiple lineages are responsible and whether their wide geographical
distribution across Brazil is due to spread from a single point source or is the result of human-mediated transmission.
188 isolates, collected from nine Brazilian states, were whole genome sequenced and analysed using phylogenetic and
comparative genomic approaches. The isolates from Brazil formed a single clade, which was estimated to have
emerged in 2003. We observed temporal and geographic structure within the lineage that enabled us to infer the
movement of sub-lineages across Brazil. The genome size of the Brazilian lineage was reduced relative to most strains
in the three subspecies of Mycobacterium abscessus and contained a novel plasmid, pMAB02, in addition to the
previously described pMAB01 plasmid. One lineage, which emerged just prior to the initial outbreak, is responsible for
the epidemic of post-surgical wound infections in Brazil. Phylogenetic analysis indicates that multiple transmission
events led to its spread. The presence of a novel plasmid and the reduced genome size suggest that the lineage has
undergone adaptation to the surgical niche.
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EVERALL, Izzy et al. Genomic epidemiology of a national outbreak of post-surgical Mycobacterium abscessus wound infections in Brazil. Microbial Genomics, London, v. 3, n. 5, e111, 2017. DOI: 10.1099/mgen.0.000111. Disponível em: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28884021/. Acesso em: 26 ago. 2024.