Whole-genome sequencing to delineate Mycobacterium tuberculosis outbreaks: a retrospective observational study
John Radcliffe Hospital · University of Oxford · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Tuberculosis incidence in the UK has risen in the past decade. Disease control depends on epidemiological data, which can be difficult to obtain. Whole-genome sequencing can detect microevolution within Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains. We aimed to estimate the genetic diversity of related M tuberculosis strains in the UK Midlands and to investigate how this measurement might be used to investigate community outbreaks.
In a retrospective observational study, we used Illumina technology to sequence M tuberculosis genomes from an archive of frozen cultures. We characterised isolates into four groups: cross-sectional, longitudinal, household, and community. We measured pairwise nucleotide differences within hosts and between hosts in household outbreaks and estimated the rate of change in DNA sequences. We used the findings to interpret network diagrams constructed from 11 community clusters derived from mycobacterial interspersed repetitive-unit-variable-number tandem-repeat data.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 32.73
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
17Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Outbreak
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis
- Single-nucleotide polymorphism
- Genetics
- Genome
- DNA sequencing
- Good health and well-being