AI Article Synopsis

  • - The disease yaws, caused by the spirochete Treponema pallidum subsp. pertenue, mainly affects children in Papua New Guinea, leading to severe skin lesions that hinder their growth and development.
  • - In a case involving a 5-year-old yaws patient, researchers found two genetically distinct strains of the bacteria, T13 and J11, coexisting in an ulcer sample.
  • - This occurrence is significant as it marks the first documented case of distinct Treponema strains coinfecting a single host, likely due to prior recombination events between closely related strains.

Article Abstract

The etiological agent of yaws is the spirochete Treponema pallidum (TP) subsp. pertenue (TPE) and infects the children of Papua New Guinea, causing ulcerative skin lesions that impairs normal growth and development. Closely related strains of Treponema pallidum subsp. pertenue, J11, and T13 were detected in an ulcer biospecimen derived from a 5-year-old yaws patient. Cloning experiments validated the presence of two distinct but similar genotypes, namely T13 and J11, co-occurring within a single host. While coinfection with highly related TPE strains has only limited epidemiological and clinical relevance, this is the first documented coinfection with genetically distinct TP strains in a single patient. Similar coinfections in the past were explained by the existence of over a dozen recombinant loci present in the TP genomes as a result of inter-strain or inter-subspecies recombination events following an anticipated scenario of TP coinfection, i.e., uptake of foreign DNA and DNA recombination.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actatropica.2024.107254DOI Listing

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