Publication | Open Access
Zoonotic Source Attribution of<i>Salmonella enterica</i>Serotype Typhimurium Using Genomic Surveillance Data, United States
100
Citations
48
References
2018
Year
Molecular EpidemiologyPathogen DetectionGenomicsUnited StatesBacterial PathogensPathogen TransmissionFood MicrobiologyInfection ControlHost-pathogen InteractionsHealth SciencesInfectious Disease EpidemiologyFoodborne PathogensDisease EmergencePathogen CharacterizationZoonotic Source AttributionBioinformaticsClinical MicrobiologyEpidemiologyPathogenesisRandom Forest ClassifierMicrobiologyMedicineRoutine Surveillance
Increasingly, routine surveillance and monitoring of foodborne pathogens using whole-genome sequencing is creating opportunities to study foodborne illness epidemiology beyond routine outbreak investigations and case-control studies. Using a global phylogeny of Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium, we found that major livestock sources of the pathogen in the United States can be predicted through whole-genome sequencing data. Relatively steady rates of sequence divergence in livestock lineages enabled the inference of their recent origins. Elevated accumulation of lineage-specific pseudogenes after divergence from generalist populations and possible metabolic acclimation in a representative swine isolate indicates possible emergence of host adaptation. We developed and retrospectively applied a machine learning Random Forest classifier for genomic source prediction of Salmonella Typhimurium that correctly attributed 7 of 8 major zoonotic outbreaks in the United States during 1998-2013. We further identified 50 key genetic features that were sufficient for robust livestock source prediction.
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