Population structure among Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates from pulmonary tuberculosis patients in Colombia
Date
2014Author(s)
Realpe, TeresaCorrea, Nidia
Carlos Rozo, Juan
Ferro, Beatriz Elena
Gomez, Verónica
Zapata, Elsa
Ribon, Wellman
Puerto, Gloria
Castro, Claudia
Nieto, Luisa María
Diaz, Maria Lilia
Rivera, Oriana
Couvin, David
Rastogi, Nalin
Arbelaez, Maria Patricia
Robledo, Jaime
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Background: Phylogeographic composition of M. tuberculosis populations reveals associations between lineages and
human populations that might have implications for the development of strategies to control the disease. In Latin America,
lineage 4 or the Euro-American, is predominant with considerable variations among and within countries. In Colombia,
although few studies from specific localities have revealed differences in M. tuberculosis populations, there are still areas of
the country where this information is lacking, as is a comparison of Colombian isolates with those from the rest of the world.
Principal Findings: A total of 414 M. tuberculosis isolates from adult pulmonary tuberculosis cases from three Colombian
states were studied. Isolates were genotyped using IS6110-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), spoligotyping,
and 24-locus Mycobacterial interspersed repetitive units variable number tandem repeats (MIRU-VNTRs). SIT42 (LAM9) and
SIT62 (H1) represented 53.3% of isolates, followed by 8.21% SIT50 (H3), 5.07% SIT53 (T1), and 3.14% SIT727 (H1). Composite
spoligotyping and 24-locus MIRU- VNTR minimum spanning tree analysis suggest a recent expansion of SIT42 and SIT62
evolved originally from SIT53 (T1). The proportion of Haarlem sublineage (44.3%) was significantly higher than that in
neighboring countries. Associations were found between M. tuberculosis MDR and SIT45 (H1), as well as HIV-positive
serology with SIT727 (H1) and SIT53 (T1).
Conclusions: This study showed the population structure of M. tuberculosis in several regions from Colombia with a
dominance of the LAM and Haarlem sublineages, particularly in two major urban settings (Medellı ´n and Cali). Dominant
spoligotypes were LAM9 (SIT 42) and Haarlem (SIT62). The proportion of the Haarlem sublineage was higher in Colombia
compared to that in neighboring countries, suggesting particular conditions of co-evolution with the corresponding human
population that favor the success of this sublineage.
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