AI Article Synopsis

  • - More human deaths are caused by a specific pathogen than any other, with ongoing transmission fueling its epidemic; typing schemes, including whole genome sequencing, help track strain differences and dynamics within affected communities.
  • - MIRU typing, a method using variable number tandem repeats, has been commonly employed in well-resourced areas for molecular epidemiology but shows limitations due to instances of homoplasy when compared to sequence-based phylogenies.
  • - A study comparing MIRU repeat numbers with whole genome sequences found no evidence of natural selection influencing these repeats, highlighting the method’s good sensitivity but poor specificity in identifying recent transmission clusters, suggesting a shift toward sequence-based typing for better accuracy in research and public health.

Article Abstract

More human deaths have been attributable to than any other pathogen, and the epidemic is sustained by ongoing transmission. Various typing schemes have been developed to identify strain-specific differences and track transmission dynamics in affected communities, with recent introduction of whole genome sequencing providing the most accurate assessment. Mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit (MIRU) typing is a family of variable number tandem repeat schemes that have been widely used to study the molecular epidemiology of . MIRU typing was used in most well-resourced settings to perform routine molecular epidemiology. Instances of MIRU homoplasy have been observed in comparison with sequence-based phylogenies, limiting its discriminatory value. A fundamental question is whether the observed homoplasy arises purely through stochastic processes, or whether there is evidence of natural selection. We compared repeat numbers at 24 MIRU loci with a whole genome sequence-based phylogeny of 245 isolates representing three modern lineages. This analysis demonstrated extensive homoplasy of repeat numbers, but did not detect any evidence of natural selection of repeat numbers, at least since the ancestral branching of the three modern lineages of . In addition, we observed good sensitivity but poor specificity and positive predictive values of MIRU-24 to detect clusters of recent transmission, as defined by whole-genome single nucleotide polymorphism analysis. These findings provide mechanistic insight, and support a transition away from VNTR-based typing toward sequence-based typing schemes for both research and public health purposes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7481465PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2020.00455DOI Listing

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