AI Article Synopsis

  • Bifidobacteria are usually harmless gut bacteria but have recently been linked to an increase in blood infections in Norway, prompting this study on 15 patients' isolates.
  • Researchers found that most infected patients were either very young or elderly, many with weakened immune systems, and noted that bifidobacterial infections sometimes led to severe sepsis-like symptoms.
  • Genome analysis did not reveal specific traits that distinguish invasive from non-invasive bifidobacterial isolates, indicating that these bacteria can be dangerous in vulnerable populations despite their generally low virulence.

Article Abstract

Bifidobacteria are commensals that colonize the orogastrointestinal tract and rarely cause invasive human infections. However, an increasing number of bifidobacterial blood culture isolates has lately been observed in Norway. In order to investigate the pathogenicity of the species responsible for bacteremia, we studied isolates from 15 patients for whom cultures of blood obtained from 2013 to 2015 were positive. We collected clinical data and analyzed phenotypic and genotypic antibiotic susceptibility. All isolates (11 , 2 , and 2 isolates) were subjected to whole-genome sequencing. The 15 patients were predominantly in the extreme lower or upper age spectrum, many were severely immunocompromised, and 11 of 15 had gastrointestinal tract-related conditions. In two elderly patients, the bacteremia caused a sepsis-like picture, interpreted as the cause of death. Most bifidobacterial isolates had low MICs (≤0.5 mg/liter) to beta-lactam antibiotics, vancomycin, and clindamycin and relatively high MICs to ciprofloxacin and metronidazole. We performed a pangenomic comparison of invasive and noninvasive isolates based on 65 sequences available from GenBank and the sequences of 11 blood culture isolates from this study. Functional annotation identified unique genes among both invasive and noninvasive isolates of Phylogenetic clusters of invasive isolates were identified for a subset of the subsp. isolates. However, there was no difference in the number of putative virulence genes between invasive and noninvasive isolates. In conclusion, has an invasive potential in the immunocompromised host and may cause a sepsis-like picture. Using comparative genomics, we could not delineate specific pathogenicity traits characterizing invasive isolates.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5483926PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JCM.00150-17DOI Listing

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