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Severe infections emerge from the microbiome by adaptive evolution

Authors :
Zamin Iqbal
Daniel J. Wilson
John Paul
Martin J. Llewelyn
Srinath Perera
Jane Charlesworth
Kevin Cole
David H. Wyllie
Ruth C. Massey
James Price
Rory Bowden
Tanya Golubchik
Wu C-H.
Derrick W. Crook
A. Sarah Walker
Anna E. Sheppard
Elian Liu
N. Claire Gordon
Peto Tea.
Bernadette C. Young
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2017.

Abstract

Bacteria responsible for the greatest global mortality colonize the human microbiome far more frequently than they cause severe infections. Whether mutation and selection within the microbiome accompany infection is unknown. We investigatedde novomutation in 1163Staphylococcus aureusgenomes from 105 infected patients with nose-colonization. We report that 72% of infections emerged from the microbiome, with infecting and nose-colonizing bacteria showing parallel adaptive differences. We found 2.8-to-3.6-fold enrichments of protein-altering variants in genes responding torsp, which regulates surface antigens and toxicity;agr, which regulates quorum-sensing, toxicity and abscess formation; and host-derived antimicrobial peptides. Adaptive mutations in pathogenesis-associated genes were 3.1-fold enriched in infecting but not nose-colonizing bacteria. None of these signatures were observed in healthy carriers nor at the species-level, suggesting disease-associated, short-term, within-host selection pressures. Our results show that infection, like a cancer of the microbiome, emerges through spontaneous adaptive evolution, raising new possibilities for diagnosis and treatment.One Sentence SummaryLife-threateningS. aureusinfections emerge from nose microbiome bacteria in association with repeatable adaptive evolution.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2987d114b9fa90d4318e77646500e535
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/116681