Whole genome sequencing identifies independent outbreaks of Shigellosis in 2010 and 2011 in La Pampa Province, Argentina

Isabel Chinen; Marcelo Galas; Ezequiel Tuduri; Maria Rosa Viñas; Carolina Carbonari; Anabella Della Gaspera; Daniela Nápoli; David M Aanensen; Silvia Argimón; Nicholas R Thomson ORCID logo; +25 more... Darren Hughes; Stephen Baker; Caterina Guzmán-Verri; Matthew TG Holden; Alejandra M Abdala; Lucia P Alvarez; Beatriz Alvez; Rosana Barros; Shirley Budall; Constanza Campano; Luciana S Chamosa; Paul Cheddie; Daniel Cisterna; Denise De Belder; Milena Dropa; David Durand; Alan Elena; Gustavo Fontecha; Claudia Huber; Ana Paula Lemos; Luciano Melli; Roxana Elizabeth Paul; Lesly Suarez; Julian Torres Flores; Josefina Campos; (2016) Whole genome sequencing identifies independent outbreaks of Shigellosis in 2010 and 2011 in La Pampa Province, Argentina. BiorXiv. DOI: 10.1101/049940
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<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p><jats:italic>Shigella sonnei</jats:italic> is an emergent cause of diarrheal disease in middle-income countries. The organism causes endemic disease and is also associated with sporadic outbreaks in susceptible populations. In 2010 and 2011 there were two suspected outbreaks of diarrheal disease caused by <jats:italic>S. sonnei</jats:italic> in La Pampa province in central Argentina. Aiming to confirm these as outbreaks and provide insight into the relationship of the strains causing these infections we combined antimicrobial susceptibility testing and pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) with whole genome sequencing (WGS). Antimicrobial susceptibility testing suggested the two events were unrelated; organisms isolated in 2010 exhibited resistance to trimethoprim sulphate whereas the 2011 <jats:italic>S. sonnei</jats:italic> were non-susceptible against ampicillin, trimethoprim sulphate and cefpodoxime. PFGE profiling confirmed the likelihood of two independent outbreaks, separating the isolates into two main XbaI restriction profiles. We additionally performed WGS on 17 isolates associated with these outbreaks. The resulting phylogeny confirmed the PFGE structure and separated the organisms into two comparatively distantly related clones. Antimicrobial resistant genes were common, and the presence of an OXA-1 was likely associated with resistance to cefpodoxime in the second outbreak. We additionally identified novel horizontally transferred genetic material that may impinge on the pathogenic phenotype of the infecting strains. Our study shows that even with a lack of supporting routine data WGS is an indispensible method for the tracking and surveillance of bacterial pathogens during outbreaks and is becoming a vital tool for the monitoring of antimicrobial resistant strains of <jats:italic>S. sonnei</jats:italic>.</jats:p>


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