Genomic Characterization of Arcobacter butzleri Strains Isolated from Various Sources in Lithuania

, the most widespread species within the genus , is considered as an emerging pathogen causing gastroenteritis in humans. Here, we performed a comparative genome-wide analysis of 40 strains from Lithuania to determine the genetic relationship, pangenome structure, putative virulence, and potential a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Microorganisms (Basel) 2023-05, Vol.11 (6), p.1425
Hauptverfasser: Uljanovas, Dainius, Gölz, Greta, Fleischmann, Susanne, Kudirkiene, Egle, Kasetiene, Neringa, Grineviciene, Audrone, Tamuleviciene, Egle, Aksomaitiene, Jurgita, Alter, Thomas, Malakauskas, Mindaugas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:, the most widespread species within the genus , is considered as an emerging pathogen causing gastroenteritis in humans. Here, we performed a comparative genome-wide analysis of 40 strains from Lithuania to determine the genetic relationship, pangenome structure, putative virulence, and potential antimicrobial- and heavy-metal-resistance genes. Core genome single nucleotide polymorphism (cgSNP) analysis revealed low within-group variability (≤4 SNPs) between three milk strains (RCM42, RCM65, RCM80) and one human strain (H19). Regardless of the type of input (i.e., cgSNPs, accessory genome, virulome, resistome), these strains showed a recurrent phylogenetic and hierarchical grouping pattern. demonstrated a relatively large and highly variable accessory genome (comprising of 6284 genes with around 50% of them identified as singletons) that only partially correlated to the isolation source. Downstream analysis of the genomes resulted in the detection of 115 putative antimicrobial- and heavy-metal-resistance genes and 136 potential virulence factors that are associated with the induction of infection in host (e.g., , , ), survival and environmental adaptation (e.g., flagellar genes, CheA-CheY chemotaxis system, urease cluster). This study provides additional knowledge for a better -related risk assessment and highlights the need for further genomic epidemiology studies in Lithuania and other countries.
ISSN:2076-2607
2076-2607
DOI:10.3390/microorganisms11061425