Pneumococcal within-host diversity during colonization, transmission and treatment

Gerry Tonkin‐Hill(University of Oslo), Clare Ling(Mahidol University), Chrispin Chaguza(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Susannah J. Salter(University of Cambridge), Pattaraporn Hinfonthong(Mahidol University), Elissavet Nikolaou(The University of Melbourne), Natalie Tate(Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine), Andrzej Pastusiak(Microsoft (United States)), Claudia Turner(Angkor Hospital for Children), Claire Chewapreecha(Mahidol University), Simon D. W. Frost(Microsoft (United States)), Jukka Corander(University of Helsinki), Nicholas J. Croucher(London Centre for Neglected Tropical Disease Research), Paul Turner(Angkor Hospital for Children), Stephen D. Bentley(Wellcome Sanger Institute)
Nature Microbiology
October 10, 2022
Cited by 72Open Access
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Abstract

Characterizing the genetic diversity of pathogens within the host promises to greatly improve surveillance and reconstruction of transmission chains. For bacteria, it also informs our understanding of inter-strain competition and how this shapes the distribution of resistant and sensitive bacteria. Here we study the genetic diversity of Streptococcus pneumoniae within 468 infants and 145 of their mothers by deep sequencing whole pneumococcal populations from 3,761 longitudinal nasopharyngeal samples. We demonstrate that deep sequencing has unsurpassed sensitivity for detecting multiple colonization, doubling the rate at which highly invasive serotype 1 bacteria were detected in carriage compared with gold-standard methods. The greater resolution identified an elevated rate of transmission from mothers to their children in the first year of the child's life. Comprehensive treatment data demonstrated that infants were at an elevated risk of both the acquisition and persistent colonization of a multidrug-resistant bacterium following antimicrobial treatment. Some alleles were enriched after antimicrobial treatment, suggesting that they aided persistence, but generally purifying selection dominated within-host evolution. Rates of co-colonization imply that in the absence of treatment, susceptible lineages outcompeted resistant lineages within the host. These results demonstrate the many benefits of deep sequencing for the genomic surveillance of bacterial pathogens.


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