Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism–Based Population Genetic Analysis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strains from 4 Geographic Sites

MM Gutacker, B Mathema, H Soini… - The Journal of …, 2006 - academic.oup.com
MM Gutacker, B Mathema, H Soini, E Shashkina, BN Kreiswirth, EA Graviss, JM Musser
The Journal of infectious diseases, 2006academic.oup.com
We studied genetic relationships among 5069 Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains
recovered from patients enrolled in 4 population-based studies in the United States and
Europe, by analysis of 36 synonymous single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). All strains
were assigned to 1 of 9 major genetic clusters based on sSNP profile. The same 9 genetic
clusters were revealed by analysis of 227 nonsynonymous SNPs, 121 intergenic SNPs, and
concatenated profiles of 578 SNPs available for a subset of 48 representative strains. IS …
Abstract
We studied genetic relationships among 5069 Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains recovered from patients enrolled in 4 population-based studies in the United States and Europe, by analysis of 36 synonymous single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). All strains were assigned to 1 of 9 major genetic clusters based on sSNP profile. The same 9 genetic clusters were revealed by analysis of 227 nonsynonymous SNPs, 121 intergenic SNPs, and concatenated profiles of 578 SNPs available for a subset of 48 representative strains. IS6110 profiles, spoligotypes, and mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit patterns were nonrandomly associated with SNP-based phylogenetic lineages, together indicating a strongly clonal population structure. Isolates of the 9 genetic clusters were not distributed with equal frequency in all localities, reflecting geographic subdivision. The SNP-based phylogenetic framework provides new insight into the worldwide evolution of M. tuberculosis and a gateway for investigating genotype-disease phenotype relationships in large samples of strains
Oxford University Press