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The Guinea-Bissau family of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex revisited.
Groenheit, Ramona; Ghebremichael, Solomon; Svensson, Jenny; Rabna, Paulo; Colombatti, Raffaella; Riccardi, Fabio; Couvin, David; Hill, Véronique; Rastogi, Nalin; Koivula, Tuija; Källenius, Gunilla.
Affiliation
  • Groenheit R; Department of Preparedness, Swedish Institute for Infectious Disease Control, Solna, Sweden.
PLoS One ; 6(4): e18601, 2011 Apr 20.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21533101
ABSTRACT
The Guinea-Bissau family of strains is a unique group of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex that, although genotypically closely related, phenotypically demonstrates considerable heterogeneity. We have investigated 414 M. tuberculosis complex strains collected in Guinea-Bissau between 1989 and 2008 in order to further characterize the Guinea-Bissau family of strains. To determine the strain lineages present in the study sample, binary outcomes of spoligotyping were compared with spoligotypes existing in the international database SITVIT2. The major circulating M. tuberculosis clades ranked in the following order AFRI (n = 195, 47.10%), Latin-American-Mediterranean (LAM) (n = 75, 18.12%), ill-defined T clade (n = 53, 12.8%), Haarlem (n = 37, 8.85%), East-African-Indian (EAI) (n = 25, 6.04%), Unknown (n = 12, 2.87%), Beijing (n = 7, 1.68%), X clade (n = 4, 0.96%), Manu (n = 4, 0.97%), CAS (n = 2, 0.48%). Two strains of the LAM clade isolated in 2007 belonged to the Cameroon family (SIT61). All AFRI isolates except one belonged to the Guinea-Bissau family, i.e. they have an AFRI_1 spoligotype pattern, they have a distinct RFLP pattern with low numbers of IS6110 insertions, and they lack the regions of difference RD7, RD8, RD9 and RD10, RD701 and RD702. This profile classifies the Guinea-Bissau family, irrespective of phenotypic biovar, as part of the M. africanum West African 2 lineage, or the AFRI_1 sublineage according to the spoligtyping nomenclature. Guinea-Bissau family strains display a variation of biochemical traits classically used to differentiate M. tuberculosis from M. bovis. Yet, the differential expression of these biochemical traits was not related to any genes so far investigated (narGHJI and pncA). Guinea-Bissau has the highest prevalence of M. africanum recorded in the African continent, and the Guinea-Bissau family shows a high phylogeographical specificity for Western Africa, with Guinea-Bissau being the epicenter. Trends over time however indicate that this family of strains is waning in most parts of Western Africa, including Guinea-Bissau (p = 0.048).
Subject(s)

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Health context: 3_ND Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Mycobacterium tuberculosis Type of study: Risk_factors_studies Limits: Humans Country/Region as subject: Africa Language: En Journal: PLoS One Year: 2011 Document type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Health context: 3_ND Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Mycobacterium tuberculosis Type of study: Risk_factors_studies Limits: Humans Country/Region as subject: Africa Language: En Journal: PLoS One Year: 2011 Document type: Article