Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases
Volume 81, Issue 3, 2018, Pages 216-221

Comparing two mycobacterium tuberculosis genomes from Chinese immigrants with native genomes using mauve alignments (Article) (Open Access)

Ryoo S. , Lee J. , Oh J.Y. , Kim B.K. , Kim Y. , Kim J.H. , Shin C. , Heon Lee S.*
  • a Clinical Research Centre, Masan National Tuberculosis Hospital, Changwon, South Korea
  • b LAS Inc., Gimpo, South Korea
  • c Division of Pulmonary, Sleep, and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Korea University Guro Hospital, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea
  • d Division of Pulmonary, Sleep, and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Korea University Ansan Hospital, Korea University College of Medicine, Ansan, South Korea
  • e Division of Pulmonary, Sleep, and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Korea University Ansan Hospital, Korea University College of Medicine, Ansan, South Korea
  • f Division of Pulmonary, Sleep, and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Korea University Ansan Hospital, Korea University College of Medicine, Ansan, South Korea
  • g Division of Pulmonary, Sleep, and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Korea University Ansan Hospital, Korea University College of Medicine, Ansan, South Korea
  • h Division of Pulmonary, Sleep, and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Korea University Ansan Hospital, Korea University College of Medicine, Ansan, South Korea

Abstract

Background: The number of immigrants with tuberculosis (TB) increases each year in South Korea. Determining the transmission dynamics based on whole genome sequencing (WGS) to cluster the strains has been challenging. Methods: WGS, annotation refinement, and orthology assignment for the GenBank accession number acquisition were performed on two clinical isolates from Chinese immigrants. In addition, the genomes of the two isolates were compared with the genomes of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates, from two native Korean and five native Chinese individuals using a phylogenetic topology tree based on the Multiple Alignment of Conserved Genomic Sequence with Rearrangements (Mauve) package. Results: The newly assigned accession numbers for two clinical isolates were CP020381.2 (a Korean-Chinese from Yanbian Province) and CP022014.1 (a Chinese from Shandong Province), respectively. Mauve alignment classified all nine TB isolates into a discriminative collinear set with matched regions. The phylogenetic analysis revealed a rooted phylogenetic tree grouping the nine strains into two lineages: strains from Chinese individuals and strains from Korean individuals. Conclusion: Phylogenetic trees based on the Mauve alignments were supposed to be useful in revealing the dynamics of TB transmission from immigrants in South Korea, which can provide valuable information for scaling up the TB screening policy for immigrants. Copyright © 2018 The Korean Academy of Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases.

Author Keywords

Strains Mycobacterium tuberculosis immigrants Whole genome sequencing

Index Keywords

immigrant Chinese Korean (people) human controlled study Mycobacterium tuberculosis nonhuman male female Article adult Phylogeny gene sequence bacterium isolate bioinformatics sequence alignment bacterial genome bacterial strain phylogenetic tree bacterium culture Mauve alignment whole genome sequencing

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85050491143&doi=10.4046%2ftrd.2017.0091&partnerID=40&md5=fc848da2dc57845ed1e037ca2e4a1615

DOI: 10.4046/trd.2017.0091
ISSN: 17383536
Original Language: English