Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3405266 International Journal of Mycobacteriology 2014 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

This study explored the genetic diversity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates in Iraq by spoligotyping and 15-locus-based mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit-variable number tandem repeat (MIRU-VNTR) methods. Initially, 270 isolates from 134 patients were collected and then 134 non-duplicating isolates (1 isolate/patient) were subjected to the study analyses, 70 isolates were found to be multidrug resistant (MDR) upon testing by proportion method on Löwenstein–Jensen medium.Spoligotyping yielded 39 patterns; 111/134 (82.2%) isolates being grouped in 16 clusters vs. 23/134 (17.2%) isolates being unique. SIT1144/T1 represented the largest cluster (n = 20, 14.9%), followed by SIT25/CAS1_Delhi (n = 19, 14.2), SIT22/CAS1_Delhi (n = 12, 9%); the other clusters ranged from 2 to 8 isolates. The SIT1144 is not reported in neighboring countries and only 4 isolates were reported worldwide (2 in USA, 1 in Venezuela, and 1 in Greece). This study reported 4 isolates belonging to SIT41/Turkey family, and thus it seems that this family is not exclusive to Turkey as previously thought. CAS lineage was predominant in this study (42.5%), followed by ill-defined T (29.9%).Highly diverse MIRU-VNTR genotypes were displayed; 100 distinct MIRU-VNTR genotypes were detected (8 clusters with 2–8 strains/cluster and 92 unique). The clustering rate was 18.03%. The discriminatory efficiency of MIRU-VNTR was high (Hunter-Gaston discriminatory index [HGDI] = 0.992); it was higher than that of spoligotyping (HGDI; 0.930). However, the highest discriminatory power was provided by spoligotyping and MIRUs together. Owing to the low clustering rate by MIRU-VNTR, these results suggest that drug-resistance TB in Iraq is due to acquired resistance as opposed to transmission.ConclusionIraq is specific in having its own most predominant lineage (SIT1144/T1) which is not found among neighboring countries. The 15-locus MIRU-VNTR can be useful in discriminating M. tuberculosis isolates in Iraq.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Virology
Authors
, , , , , ,