4.8 Article

Comparative phylogenomics of the food-borne pathogen Campylobacter jejuni reveals genetic markers predictive of infection source

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0503252102

Keywords

microarray analysis; gastrointestinal pathogen; Bayesian-based algorithm

Funding

  1. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [E20372] Funding Source: Medline
  2. Wellcome Trust [062511] Funding Source: Medline
  3. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [E20372] Funding Source: researchfish

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Campylobacter jejuni is the predominant cause of bacterial gastroenteritis worldwide, but traditional typing methods are unable to discriminate strains from different sources that cause disease in humans. We report the use of genomotyping (whole-genome comparisons of microbes using DNA microarrays) combined with Bayesian-based algorithms to model the phylogeny of this major food-borne pathogen. In this study 111 C. jejuni strains were examined by genomotyping isolates from humans with a spectrum of C. jejuni-associated disease (70 strains), chickens (17 strains), bovines (13 strains), ovines (5 strains), and the environment (6 strains). From these data, the Bayesian phylogeny of the isolates revealed two distinct Glades unequivocally supported by Bayesian probabilities (P = 1); a livestock Glade comprising 31/35 (88.6%) of the livestock isolates and a nonlivestock Glade comprising further Glades of environmental isolates. Several genes were identified as characteristic of strains in the livestock Glade. The most prominent was a cluster of six genes (cj1321 to cj1326) within the flagellin glycosylation locus, which were confirmed by PCR analysis as genetic markers in six additional chicken-associated strains. Surprisingly these studies show that the majority (39/70, 55.7%) of C. jejuni human isolates were found in the nonlivestock Glade, suggesting that most C. jejuni infections may be from nonlivestock (and possibly nonagricultural) sources. This study has provided insight into a previously unidentified reservoir of C. jejuni infection that may have implications in disease-control strategies. The comparative phylogenomics approach described provides a robust methodological prototype that should be applicable to other microbes.

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