4.7 Article

Salmonella enterica subsp. II serovar 4,5,12:a:- may cause gastroenteritis infections in humans

Journal

GUT MICROBES
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/19490976.2022.2089007

Keywords

Salmonella; serovar; genome; virulence; gastroenteritis

Funding

  1. Major Project of the Thirteenth Five-Year Special for Infectious Diseases of China [2018ZX10101002]
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFC1603800]

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This study discovered a new serovar of Salmonella (S. enterica subsp. II serovar 4,5,12:a:-) and demonstrated its ability to infect humans and cause clusters of cases. Whole-genome sequencing detection and surveillance of Salmonella can accurately define Salmonella classification and clonality, improve diagnosis, facilitate outbreak detection, and aid in the source tracing of salmonellosis epidemics.
Some serovars of Salmonella are not or rare found to cause salmonellosis in human. In our clinic-based surveillance, three rare Salmonella 4,5,12:a:- strains were recovered from three patients with diarrhea. To explore their genetic and epidemiological characteristics and pathogenesis, we conducted whole-genome sequencing, in vitro invasion assays in mammalian cells, and in vivo virulence assays in an animal model. The three isolates had indistinguishable molecular patterns and similar genome sequences, and clustered together with an isolate from edible fish traded among countries. The isolates had biochemical reactions identical with those of Salmonella subspecies enterica but belonged to subspecies salamae according to genome phylogeny, revealing a new serovar, S. enterica subsp. II serovar 4,5,12:a:-. The strains contained multiple virulence genes, elicited temporary bacteremia and enteritidis and caused cell damage in the mouse liver and cecum. This study provides evidence that this new Salmonella salamae serovar can infect humans and cause clusters of cases, and whole-genome sequencing detection and surveillance of Salmonella can help to accurately define Salmonella classification and clonality, improve diagnosis, facilitate outbreak detection and aid in the source tracing of salmonellosis epidemics.

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