4.5 Article

Occurrence of Legionella spp. in Man-Made Water Sources: Isolates Distribution and Phylogenetic Characterization in the Emilia-Romagna Region

Journal

PATHOGENS
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pathogens10050552

Keywords

hospitals and communities; Legionella spp; distribution; agglutination test; mip-gene sequencing; phylogenetic analysis

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The study in the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy revealed a higher prevalence of non-Legionella pneumophila species in hospital and community environments compared to L. pneumophila, with a higher frequency of non-L. pneumophila species in both environments. The analysis also showed significant differences in Legionella distribution between hospital and community environments, with a significant abundance of L. pneumophila in hospitals compared to communities. The findings suggest the importance of Legionella surveillance in both hospital and community settings, particularly focusing on non-L. pneumophila species less associated with human disease.
Legionella species distribution in the Emilia-Romagna region, involving hospital (H) and community (C) environments, was conducted. Legionella culture, agglutination test, and mip-gene sequencing were applied on 240 isolates. The analysis showed a higher prevalence of non-Legionella pneumophila (n-Lp) species (84.1%) compared with L. pneumophila (Lp) (15.9%), with a higher frequency of n-Lp with respect to Lp species in both environments (77.6% and 96.4%, in H and C, respectively). The Shannon index showed a significant difference in Legionella distribution (p = 0.00017), with a significant abundance of Lp in the H compared with C environment (p = 0.00028). The continuous disinfection treatment in H could contribute to adaptive survival of the Lp species. Phylogenetic analysis revealed a conservative clade distribution between H and C: L. feeleii clade with three subclades in C and the Lp clade with five subclades in H and two in C, respectively. Our findings suggest the importance of Legionella surveillance both in H and C, with a focus on n-Lp species less connected to human disease. The Legionella prevalence and diversity found here indicate that geographical and temporal isolate evolution should be considered during surveillance, particularly in the light of global warming and changes in population risk factors.

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