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Phylogenetic lineages of tuberculosis isolates and their association with patient demographics in Tanzania

Authors :
Beatrice Kemilembe Mutayoba
Michael Hoelscher
Norbert Heinrich
Moses L. Joloba
Eligius Lyamuya
Andrew Martin Kilale
Nyagosya Segere Range
Bernard James Ngowi
Nyanda Elias Ntinginya
Saidi Mwinjuma Mfaume
Amani Wilfred
Basra Doulla
Johnson Lyimo
Riziki Kisonga
Amri Kingalu
Jupiter Marina Kabahita
Ocung Guido
Joel Kabugo
Isa Adam
Moses Luutu
Maria Magdalene Namaganda
Joanitah Namutebi
George William Kasule
Hasfah Nakato
Henry Byabajungu
Pius Lutaaya
Kenneth Musisi
Denis Oola
Gerald Mboowa
Michel Pletschette
Source :
BMC Genomics, Vol 23, Iss 1, Pp 1-9 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMC, 2022.

Abstract

Abstract Background Mycobacterium tuberculosis presents several lineages each with distinct characteristics of evolutionary status, transmissibility, drug resistance, host interaction, latency, and vaccine efficacy. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) has emerged as a new diagnostic tool to reliably inform the occurrence of phylogenetic lineages of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and examine their relationship with patient demographic characteristics and multidrug-resistance development. Methods 191 Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates obtained from a 2017/2018 Tanzanian drug resistance survey were sequenced on the Illumina Miseq platform at Supranational Tuberculosis Reference Laboratory in Uganda. Obtained fast-q files were imported into tools for resistance profiling and lineage inference (Kvarq v0.12.2, Mykrobe v0.8.1 and TBprofiler v3.0.5). Additionally for phylogenetic tree construction, RaxML-NG v1.0.3(25) was used to generate a maximum likelihood phylogeny with 800 bootstrap replicates. The resulting trees were plotted, annotated and visualized using ggtree v2.0.4 Results Most [172(90.0%)] of the isolates were from newly treated Pulmonary TB patients. Coinfection with HIV was observed in 33(17.3%) TB patients. Of the 191 isolates, 22(11.5%) were resistant to one or more commonly used first line anti-TB drugs (FLD), 9(4.7%) isolates were MDR-TB while 3(1.6%) were resistant to all the drugs. Of the 24 isolates with any resistance conferring mutations, 13(54.2%) and 10(41.6%) had mutations in genes associated with resistance to INH and RIF respectively. The findings also show four major lineages i.e. Lineage 3[81 (42.4%)], followed by Lineage 4 [74 (38.7%)], the Lineage 1 [23 (12.0%)] and Lineages 2 [13 (6.8%)] circulaing in Tanzania. Conclusion The findings in this study show that Lineage 3 is the most prevalent lineage in Tanzania whereas drug resistant mutations were more frequent among isolates that belonged to Lineage 4.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712164
Volume :
23
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMC Genomics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6a1b4021e10a4ae888c4acaae43752f5
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-022-08791-3