Distinct Salmonella Enteritidis lineages associated with enterocolitis in high-income settings and invasive disease in low-income settings.

Nicholas A Feasey; James Hadfield; Karen H Keddy; Timothy J Dallman; Jan Jacobs; Xiangyu Deng; Paul Wigley; Lars Barquist; Gemma C Langridge; Theresa Feltwell; +37 more... Simon R Harris; Alison E Mather; Maria Fookes; Martin Aslett; Chisomo Msefula; Samuel Kariuki; Calman A Maclennan; Robert S Onsare; François-Xavier Weill; Simon Le Hello; Anthony M Smith; Michael McClelland; Prerak Desai; Christopher M Parry; John Cheesbrough; Neil French; Josefina Campos; Jose A Chabalgoity; Laura Betancor; Katie L Hopkins; Satheesh Nair; Tom J Humphrey; Octavie Lunguya; Tristan A Cogan; Milagritos D Tapia; Samba O Sow; Sharon M Tennant; Kristin Bornstein; Myron M Levine; Lizeth Lacharme-Lora; Dean B Everett; Robert A Kingsley; Julian Parkhill; Robert S Heyderman; Gordon Dougan; Melita A Gordon; Nicholas R Thomson ORCID logo; (2016) Distinct Salmonella Enteritidis lineages associated with enterocolitis in high-income settings and invasive disease in low-income settings. Nature genetics, 48 (10). pp. 1211-1217. ISSN 1061-4036 DOI: 10.1038/ng.3644
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An epidemiological paradox surrounds Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis. In high-income settings, it has been responsible for an epidemic of poultry-associated, self-limiting enterocolitis, whereas in sub-Saharan Africa it is a major cause of invasive nontyphoidal Salmonella disease, associated with high case fatality. By whole-genome sequence analysis of 675 isolates of S. Enteritidis from 45 countries, we show the existence of a global epidemic clade and two new clades of S. Enteritidis that are geographically restricted to distinct regions of Africa. The African isolates display genomic degradation, a novel prophage repertoire, and an expanded multidrug resistance plasmid. S. Enteritidis is a further example of a Salmonella serotype that displays niche plasticity, with distinct clades that enable it to become a prominent cause of gastroenteritis in association with the industrial production of eggs and of multidrug-resistant, bloodstream-invasive infection in Africa.


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