Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Evolutionary Origins and Virulence Determinants of ST25 Hypervirulentin Swine: Genomic Insights and Functional Validation.
- Journal:
- Transboundary and emerging diseases
- Year:
- 2026
- Authors:
- Chen, Zheng et al.
- Affiliation:
- College of Veterinary Medicine · China
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
The global spread of multidrug-resistant hypervirulent(MDR-HvKp), among which carbapenem-resistant strains are of major concern, poses a severe threat to public health due to its high mortality rate and extremely limited treatment options. While human-derived HvKp strains are well-studied, animal-origin variants remain poorly characterized. Here, we isolated a HvKp strain KPB from a swine farm in China, exhibiting high mortality and extreme virulence (LD = 20 CFU). Phylogenomic analysis of 342genomes revealed that the swine-derived KPB (sequence type 25 [ST25] lineage) clusters closely with clinical isolates, suggesting zoonotic transmission risks. Targeted mutagenesis identified-mediated capsule synthesis as the critical virulence determinant, with capsule-deficient mutants showing 100% reduced lethality in mouse infection models. Building on this, we developed a phage therapy achieving 100% survival in infected mice at 10PFU doses. These findings highlight the evolutionary convergence of animal and human HvKp strains and propose phage-based strategies as a promising countermeasure against infections due to HvKp. Our study underscores the urgency of One Health surveillance to mitigate zoonotic threats.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41574279/