6533b82efe1ef96bd129280e
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Origin of modern syphilis and emergence of a contemporary pandemic cluster
Steven J. NorrisMarcelo Rodríguez FermepinJohannes KrauseDavid ŠMajsGünter JägerHomayoun C. BagheriLucía Gallo VauletLenka MikalováPaul R. GrantSylvia M. BruistenPatrick FrenchDenise KühnertLinda GrillováFernando González-candelasPhilipp P. BosshardKirsten I. BosNatasha AroraKay NieseltVerena J. SchuenemannAlexander SeitzLeyla R. DavisArturo Centurion-laraMaría A. PandoAntonio Luis López MartínezLorenzo GiacaniAlexander PeltzerAlexander HerbigMichal StrouhalLeonor Sánchez-busóPeter Komerickisubject
0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyTreponemaPhylogenetic tree030306 microbiologyStrain (biology)PopulationBiologyDisease clusterbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirology3. Good health03 medical and health sciencesEvolutionary biologyPandemicmedicineSyphiliseducation030304 developmental biologyAncestordescription
AbstractSyphilis swept across the world in the 16th century as one of most prominent documented pandemics and is re-emerging worldwide despite the availability of effective antibiotics. Little is known about the genetic patterns in current infections or the evolutionary origins of the disease due to the non-cultivable and clonal nature of the causative bacterium Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum. In this study, we used DNA capture and next generation sequencing to obtain whole genome data from syphilis patient specimens and from treponemes propagated in laboratory settings. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that the syphilis strains examined here share a common ancestor after the 15th century. Moreover, most contemporary strains are azithromycin resistant and members of a globally dominant cluster named here as SS14-Ω. This cluster diversified from a common ancestor in the mid-20th century and has the population genetic and epidemiological features indicative of the emergence of a pandemic strain cluster.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-04-29 |