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Whole-genome sequencing as a tool for studying the microevolution of drug-resistant serial Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates

Authors :
Yasmin Castillos de Ibrahim das Neves
Ana Rita Gomes
Ana Júlia Reis
Arnab Pain
João Luis Rheingantz Scaini
Adriano Velasque Werhli
Daniela Fernandes Ramos
Jody Phelan
João Perdigão
Susana Campino
Maria Lucia Rosa Rossetti
Karina S. Machado
Pedro Eduardo Almeida da Silva
Taane G. Clark
Isabel Portugal
Elis R. Dalla-Costa
Jaciara Diniz
Andrea von Groll
Gisela Unis
Priscila Cristina Bartolomeu Halicki
Miguel Viveiros
Júlia Silveira Vianna
Source :
Tuberculosis (Edinburgh, Scotland). 131
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis requires extended use of more toxic and less effective drugs and may result in retreatment cases due to failure, abandonment or disease recurrence. It is therefore important to understand the evolutionary process of drug resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. We here in describe the microevolution of drug resistance in serial isolates from six previously treated patients. Drug resistance was initially investigated through phenotypic methods, followed by genotypic approaches. The use of whole-genome sequencing allowed the identification of mutations in the katG, rpsL and rpoB genes associated with drug resistance, including the detection of rare mutations in katG and mixed populations of strains. Molecular docking simulation studies of the impact of observed mutations on isoniazid binding were also performed. Whole-genome sequencing detected 266 single nucleotide polymorphisms between two isolates obtained from one patient, suggesting a case of exogenous reinfection. In conclusion, sequencing technologies can detect rare mutations related to drug resistance, identify subpopulations of resistant strains, and identify diverse populations of strains due to exogenous reinfection, thus improving tuberculosis control by guiding early implementation of appropriate clinical and therapeutic interventions.

Details

ISSN :
1873281X
Volume :
131
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Tuberculosis (Edinburgh, Scotland)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....714c58e45ec28ec9d2c1072cb269f25e