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A population-level strain genotyping method to study pathogen strain dynamics in human infections
Sarah J. Morgan, … , Matthew C. Radey, Pradeep K. Singh
Sarah J. Morgan, … , Matthew C. Radey, Pradeep K. Singh
Published December 22, 2021
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2021;6(24):e152472. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.152472.
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Resource and Technical Advance Infectious disease Microbiology

A population-level strain genotyping method to study pathogen strain dynamics in human infections

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Abstract

A hallmark of chronic bacterial infections is the long-term persistence of 1 or more pathogen species at the compromised site. Repeated detection of the same bacterial species can suggest that a single strain or lineage is continually present. However, infection with multiple strains of a given species, strain acquisition and loss, and changes in strain relative abundance can occur. Detecting strain-level changes and their effects on disease is challenging because most methods require labor-intensive isolate-by-isolate analyses, and thus, only a few cells from large infecting populations can be examined. Here, we present a population-level method for enumerating and measuring the relative abundance of strains called population multi-locus sequence typing (PopMLST). The method exploits PCR amplification of strain-identifying polymorphic loci, next-generation sequencing to measure allelic variants, and informatic methods to determine whether variants arise from sequencing errors or low-abundance strains. These features enable PopMLST to simultaneously interrogate hundreds of bacterial cells that are cultured en masse from patient samples or are present in DNA directly extracted from clinical specimens without ex vivo culture. This method could be used to detect epidemic or super-infecting strains, facilitate understanding of strain dynamics during chronic infections, and enable studies that link strain changes to clinical outcomes.

Authors

Sarah J. Morgan, Samantha L. Durfey, Sumedha Ravishankar, Peter Jorth, Wendy Ni, Duncan T. Skerrett, Moira L. Aitken, Edward F. McKone, Stephen J. Salipante, Matthew C. Radey, Pradeep K. Singh

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Figure 4

PopMLST can identify at least 4 unique MLST types in a mixture.

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PopMLST can identify at least 4 unique MLST types in a mixture.
Equimola...
Equimolar mixtures of DNA from 3 or 4 strains were analyzed by PopMLST. Unique MLST loci alleles of the 4 strains present in the mixtures are shown as blue, red, yellow, and brown. Alleles shared between strains added to the mixture cannot be assigned to a particular strain and are therefore colored as follows: alleles common to strains indicated with yellow and red are indicated with orange; alleles common to strains indicated with blue and brown are indicated with green (A); alleles common to strains indicated with red and blue are indicated with purple; and alleles common to strains indicated with blue and yellow and brown are indicated with green (B). Bars in A show relative abundance of Sa MLST alleles arc, aro, glp, gmk, pta, tpi, and yqi (in order). Bars in B show relative abundance of Pa MLST alleles acs, gua, mut, nuo, pps, and trp (in order). MLST alleles identified but not present in the mixtures (likely sequencing error) are indicated in black, and those detected at more than 1% are indicated with *.

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