1. Chlamydia trachomatis genotypes A and B from urogenital specimens of patients in Spain: molecular characterization
- Author
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Luis Piñeiro, Jenny Isaksson, Gustavo Cilla, Björn Herrmann, and Marisol Zapico
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Sexual transmission ,Genotype ,030106 microbiology ,Urogenital System ,Chlamydia trachomatis ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Public Health Surveillance ,Allele ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Phylogeny ,Genetics ,General Medicine ,Amplicon ,Chlamydia Infections ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Trachoma ,Spain ,Multilocus sequence typing ,Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins ,Multilocus Sequence Typing - Abstract
Objectives Chlamydia trachomatis ompA genotypes A and B, primarily associated with trachoma, were unexpectedly detected in urogenital samples of patients in Spain, a trachoma-free country. In this study, we aimed to explain this finding using analysis of organotropism-related genes and a multilocus sequence typing (MLST) technique. Methods C. trachomatis genotypes A or B were detected in 8/930 (0.9%) infection episodes between 2006 and 2012. In these strains, organotropism-related genes (polymorphic membrane protein gene H, tryptophan synthase gene A, CTA0934, and cytotoxin) were studied. Further, the strains were analysed by MLST, using a polymerase chain reaction that amplifies five highly variable genomic loci ( hctB , CT058, CT144, CT172, and pbpB ). Amplicons were sequenced and phylogenetic analysis was conducted. Results Seven strains were detected in the eight infection episodes (in one patient, an identical strain being found in two episodes). Analysis of organotropism-related genes showed that these strains shared genetic features characteristic of genitotropic genotypes but not of trachoma strains. Three strains of genotype A showed a unique and new MLST-sequence type (ST551, allele profile 8-8-2-27-69). The four strains of genotype B belonged to ST138. Conclusions C. trachomatis ompA genotypes A and B associated with trachoma, but detected sporadically in urogenital samples in trachoma-free countries, may be the result of recombination between strains adapted to trachoma and strains adapted to sexual transmission.
- Published
- 2017