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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Metagenomic sequencing of clinical samples reveals a single widespread clone ofresponsible for porcine proliferative enteropathy.

Journal:
Microbial genomics
Year:
2020
Authors:
Bengtsson, Rebecca J et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Infection and Immunity · United Kingdom
Species:
horse

Abstract

is a Gram-negative obligate intracellular bacterium that is the aetiological agent of proliferative enteropathy (PE), a common intestinal disease of major economic importance in pigs and other animal species. To date, progress in understanding the biology offor improved disease control has been hampered by the inability to culture the organism. In particular, our understanding of the genomic diversity and population structure of clinicalis very limited. Here, we utilized a metagenomic shotgun approach to directly sequence and assemble 21.genomes from faecal and ileum samples of infected pigs and horses across three continents. Phylogenetic analysis revealed a genetically monomorphic clonal lineage responsible for infections in pigs, with distinct subtypes associated with infections in horses. The genome was highly conserved, with 94 % of genes shared by all isolates and a very small accessory genome made up of only 84 genes across all sequenced strains. In part, the accessory genome was represented by regions with a high density of SNPs, indicative of recombination events importing novel gene alleles. In summary, our analysis provides the first view of the population structure for, revealing a single major lineage associated with disease of pigs. The limited diversity and broad geographical distribution suggest the recent emergence and clonal expansion of an important livestock pathogen.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32238228/