Isolation and comparative genomics of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from cattle and their attendants in South India
Authors
Palaniyandi, Kannan
Kumar, Narender
Veerasamy, Maroudam
Dolla, Chandrakumar
Balaji, Subramanyam
Baskaran, Dhanaraj
Thiruvengadam, Kannan
Rajendran, Ananthi
Narayanan, Sujatha
Raj, Dhinakar
Swaminathan, Soumya
Publication Date
2019-11-29Journal Title
Scientific Reports
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Volume
9
Issue
1
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Palaniyandi, K., Kumar, N., Veerasamy, M., Kabir Refaya, A., Dolla, C., Balaji, S., Baskaran, D., et al. (2019). Isolation and comparative genomics of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from cattle and their attendants in South India. Scientific Reports, 9 (1) https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-54268-x
Description
Funder: UK Medical Research Council, grant Reference number (MR/N501864/1)
Abstract
Abstract: The major human pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis is rarely reported to cause disease in other animals. Cases in livestock are thought to occur through contact with infected handlers, but previous studies evaluating putative livestock-human transmission used typing techniques with limited resolution. Here, we undertook cross-sectional surveillance for tuberculosis in 271 livestock handlers and 167 cattle on three farms in Chennai, India and defined the relatedness of cultured isolates using whole genome sequencing. Humans and livestock were screened for active mycobacterial infection, and opportunistic post-mortem examination was performed on comparative intradermal test-positive cattle that died. Four cattle and 6 handlers on two farms were culture-positive for M. tuberculosis; M. bovis was not isolated. All 10 isolates (one from each case) belonged to Lineage 1. Pairwise genome comparisons of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) differences ranged from 1 to 600 SNPs, but 3 isolate pairs were less than 5 SNPs different. Two pairs were from handlers and the third pair were from two cattle on the same farm. The minimum pairwise SNP difference between a cattle and human isolate was >250 SNPs. Our study confirms the presence of M. tuberculosis infection in cattle in India, sequencing of which characterised relatedness between human and cattle-derived isolates.
Keywords
Article, /631/326/107, /631/326/421, /45/23, /45/22, article
Identifiers
s41598-019-54268-x, 54268
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-54268-x
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/313502
Rights
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Licence URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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