A Role for Tetracycline Selection in Recent Evolution of Agriculture-Associated <i>Clostridium difficile</i> PCR Ribotype 078

Kate E. Dingle(John Radcliffe Hospital), Xavier Didelot(University of Warwick), T. Phuong Quan(John Radcliffe Hospital), David W. Eyre(John Radcliffe Hospital), Nicole Stoesser(John Radcliffe Hospital), Charis Marwick(University of Dundee), John Coia, Derek Brown, Sarah Buchanan(University of Glasgow), Umer Zeeshan Ijaz(University of Glasgow), Cosmika Goswami(University of Glasgow), Gill Douce(University of Glasgow), Warren N. Fawley(Leeds General Infirmary), Mark H. Wilcox(Leeds General Infirmary), Tim Peto(John Radcliffe Hospital), A Sarah Walker(John Radcliffe Hospital), Derrick W. Crook(John Radcliffe Hospital)
mBio
March 11, 2019
Cited by 96Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Clostridium difficile PCR ribotype 078 (RT078) has multiple reservoirs; many are agricultural. Since 2005, this genotype has been increasingly associated with human infections in both clinical settings and the community. Investigations of RT078 whole-genome sequences revealed that tetracycline resistance had been acquired on multiple independent occasions. Phylogenetic analysis revealed a rapid, recent increase in numbers of closely related tetracycline-resistant RT078 (clonal expansions), suggesting that tetracycline selection has strongly influenced its recent evolutionary history. We demonstrate recent international spread of emergent, tetracycline-resistant RT078. A similar tetracycline-positive clonal expansion was also identified in unrelated nontoxigenic C. difficile , suggesting that this process may be widespread and may be independent of disease-causing ability. Resistance to typical C. difficile infection-associated antimicrobials (e.g., fluoroquinolones, clindamycin) occurred only sporadically within RT078. Selective pressure from tetracycline appears to be a key factor in the emergence of this human pathogen and the rapid international dissemination that followed, plausibly via the food chain.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis