Publications by authors named "G Refregier"

Analysis of genome sequencing data from >100,000 genomes of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex using TB-Annotator software revealed a previously unknown lineage, proposed name L10, in central Africa. Phylogenetic reconstruction suggests L10 could represent a missing link in the evolutionary and geographic migration histories of M. africanum.

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Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) has a population structure consisting of 9 human and animal lineages. The genomic diversity within these lineages is a pathogenesis factor that affects virulence, transmissibility, host response, and antibiotic resistance. Hence it is important to develop improved information systems for tracking and understanding the spreading and evolution of genomes.

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The date of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex emergence has been the subject of long debates. New studies joining archaeological efforts with sequencing methods raise high hopes for solving whether this emergence is closer to 70,000 or to 6000 years before present. Inferring the date of emergence of this pathogen based on sequence data requires a molecular clock.

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The daily increasing sequencing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis has made it possible to establish an advanced phylogeny of this bacterium. It currently includes 9 lineages mainly affecting humans, completed by animal lineages, which form the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex. Inherited from various historical approaches, this phylogeny is now based on Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs), of which updates are frequently proposed.

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Bacterial strain-types in the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex underlie tuberculosis disease, and have been associated with drug resistance, transmissibility, virulence, and host-pathogen interactions. Spoligotyping was developed as a molecular genotyping technique used to determine strain-types, though recent advances in whole genome sequencing (WGS) technology have led to their characterization using SNP-based sub-lineage nomenclature. Notwithstanding, spoligotyping remains an important tool and there is a need to study the congruence between spoligotyping-based and SNP-based sub-lineage assignation.

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