In December 2015, six cases of Shiga toxin (Stx)-producing (STEC) O157:H7 phage type (PT) 24 were identified by the national gastrointestinal disease surveillance system at Public Health England (PHE). Frozen grated coconut imported from India was implicated as the vehicle of infection. Short and long read sequencing data were interrogated for genomic markers to provide evidence that the outbreak strain was from an imported source. The outbreak strain belonged to a sub-lineage (IIa) rare in domestically acquired infection in the United Kingdom, and indicative of an imported strain. Phylogenetic analysis identified the most closely related isolates to the outbreak strain were from cases reporting recent travel not to India, but to Uganda. Phylo-geographical signals based on travel data may be confounded by the failure of local and/or global monitoring systems to capture the full diversity of strains in a given country. This may be due to low prevalence strains circulating in-country under the surveillance radar, or a recent importation event involving the migration of animals and/or people. Comparison of -encoding prophage harbored by the outbreak strain with publicly available -encoding prophage sequences revealed that it was most closely related to -encoding prophage acquired by STEC O157:H7 that caused the first outbreak of STEC-hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) in England in 1982-83. Animal and people migration events may facilitate the transfer of -encoding prophage from indigenous STEC O157:H7 to recently imported strains, or vice versa. Monitoring the global transmission of STEC O157:H7 and tracking the exchange of -encoding phage between imported and indigenous strains may provide an early warning of emerging threats to public health.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7609406 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.577658 | DOI Listing |
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