4.5 Article

A genome epidemiological study of mycobacterium tuberculosis in subpopulations with high and low incidence rate in Guangxi, South China

Journal

BMC INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12879-021-06385-0

Keywords

Molecular epidemiology; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; China; Drug resistance; Genetic evolution

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81760603]

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The study sequenced genomes of M. tuberculosis from high and low incidence regions in Guangxi, revealing significant genetic variation among populations in different counties. Regions with low TB incidence showed lower prevalence of Beijing genotypes, and strains of modern Beijing lineage were more likely to acquire drug resistance. The findings suggest a potential impact of bacterial population structure on TB incidence rates and support the hypothesis that the Modern Beijing lineage originated in South China.
Background Tuberculosis (TB) is caused by a bacterium called Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). China is the third in top 8 high TB burden countries and Guangxi is one of the high incidence areas in South China. Determine bacterial factors that affected TB incidence rate is a step toward Ending the TB epidemic. Results Genomes of M. tuberculosis cultures from a relatively high and low incidence region in Guangxi have been sequenced. 347 of 358(96.9%) were identified as M. tuberculosis. All the strains belong to Lineage 2 and Lineage 4, except for one in Lineage 1. We found that the genetic structure of the M. tuberculosis population in each county varies enormously. Low incidence rate regions have a lower prevalence of Beijing genotypes than other regions. Four isolates which harbored mutT4-48 also had mutT2-58 mutations. It is suggested that strains from the ancestors of modern Beijing lineage is circulating in Guangxi. Strains of modern Beijing lineage (OR=2.04) were more likely to acquire drug resistances than Lineage 4. Most of the lineage differentiation SNPs are related to cell wall biosynthetic pathways. Conclusions These results provided a higher resolution to better understand the history of transmission of M. tuberculosis from/to South China. And the incidence rate of tuberculosis might be affected by bacterial population structure shaped by demographic history. Our findings also support the hypothesis that Modern Beijing lineage originated in South China.

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