Publication | Open Access
Single‐Nucleotide Polymorphism–Based Population Genetic Analysis of<i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i>Strains from 4 Geographic Sites
201
Citations
47
References
2005
Year
Intergenic SnpsGenetic TestingMolecular EpidemiologyGeneticsTuberculosis PreventionGenetic EpidemiologyHuman PolymorphismPopulation Genetic AnalysisMycobacterium Tuberculosis StrainsGenomicsGenetic AnalysisMolecular EcologyM. TuberculosisHost GeneticsTuberculosis DiagnosticsPublic HealthPulmonary TuberculosisGeographic SitesStatistical GeneticsTuberculosisGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsBioinformaticsClinical MicrobiologyMicrobiologyMedicine
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.
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