Genomic investigation of a suspected outbreak of Legionella pneumophila ST82 reveals undetected heterogeneity by the present gold-standard methods, Denmark, July to November 2014

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Genomic investigation of a suspected outbreak of Legionella pneumophila ST82 reveals undetected heterogeneity by the present gold-standard methods, Denmark, July to November 2014. / Schjørring, Susanne; Stegger, Marc; Kjelsø, Charlotte; Lilje, Berit; Bangsborg, Jette Marie; Petersen, Randi F.; David, Sophia; Uldum, Søren A.

In: Eurosurveillance, Vol. 22, No. 25, 2017.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Schjørring, S, Stegger, M, Kjelsø, C, Lilje, B, Bangsborg, JM, Petersen, RF, David, S & Uldum, SA 2017, 'Genomic investigation of a suspected outbreak of Legionella pneumophila ST82 reveals undetected heterogeneity by the present gold-standard methods, Denmark, July to November 2014', Eurosurveillance, vol. 22, no. 25. https://doi.org/10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2017.22.25.30558

APA

Schjørring, S., Stegger, M., Kjelsø, C., Lilje, B., Bangsborg, J. M., Petersen, R. F., David, S., & Uldum, S. A. (2017). Genomic investigation of a suspected outbreak of Legionella pneumophila ST82 reveals undetected heterogeneity by the present gold-standard methods, Denmark, July to November 2014. Eurosurveillance, 22(25). https://doi.org/10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2017.22.25.30558

Vancouver

Schjørring S, Stegger M, Kjelsø C, Lilje B, Bangsborg JM, Petersen RF et al. Genomic investigation of a suspected outbreak of Legionella pneumophila ST82 reveals undetected heterogeneity by the present gold-standard methods, Denmark, July to November 2014. Eurosurveillance. 2017;22(25). https://doi.org/10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2017.22.25.30558

Author

Schjørring, Susanne ; Stegger, Marc ; Kjelsø, Charlotte ; Lilje, Berit ; Bangsborg, Jette Marie ; Petersen, Randi F. ; David, Sophia ; Uldum, Søren A. / Genomic investigation of a suspected outbreak of Legionella pneumophila ST82 reveals undetected heterogeneity by the present gold-standard methods, Denmark, July to November 2014. In: Eurosurveillance. 2017 ; Vol. 22, No. 25.

Bibtex

@article{09ad77fd22b142a38445268932e791cf,
title = "Genomic investigation of a suspected outbreak of Legionella pneumophila ST82 reveals undetected heterogeneity by the present gold-standard methods, Denmark, July to November 2014",
abstract = "Between July and November 2014, 15 communityacquired cases of Legionnaires{\textquoteright} disease (LD), including four with Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 sequence type (ST) 82, were diagnosed in Northern Zealand, Denmark. An outbreak was suspected. No ST82 isolates were found in environmental samples and no external source was established. Four putativeoutbreak ST82 isolates were retrospectively subjected to whole genome sequencing (WGS) followed by phylogenetic analyses with epidemiologically unrelated ST82 sequences. The four putative-outbreak ST82 sequences fell into two clades, the two clades were separated by ca 1,700 single nt polymorphisms (SNP) s when recombination regions were included but only by 12 to 21 SNPs when these were removed. A single putative-outbreak ST82 isolate sequence segregated in the first clade. The other three clustered in the second clade, where all included sequences had < 5 SNP differences between them. Intriguingly, this clade also comprised epidemiologically unrelated isolate sequences from the UK and Denmark dating back as early as 2011. The study confirms that recombination plays a major role in L. pneumophila evolution. On the other hand, strains belonging to the same ST can have only few SNP differences despite being sampled over both large timespans and geographic distances. These are two important factors to consider in outbreak investigations.",
author = "Susanne Schj{\o}rring and Marc Stegger and Charlotte Kjels{\o} and Berit Lilje and Bangsborg, {Jette Marie} and Petersen, {Randi F.} and Sophia David and Uldum, {S{\o}ren A.}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2017.22.25.30558",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
journal = "Eurosurveillance",
issn = "1025-496X",
publisher = "Centre Europeen pour la Surveillance Epidemiologique du SIDA",
number = "25",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Genomic investigation of a suspected outbreak of Legionella pneumophila ST82 reveals undetected heterogeneity by the present gold-standard methods, Denmark, July to November 2014

AU - Schjørring, Susanne

AU - Stegger, Marc

AU - Kjelsø, Charlotte

AU - Lilje, Berit

AU - Bangsborg, Jette Marie

AU - Petersen, Randi F.

AU - David, Sophia

AU - Uldum, Søren A.

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Between July and November 2014, 15 communityacquired cases of Legionnaires’ disease (LD), including four with Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 sequence type (ST) 82, were diagnosed in Northern Zealand, Denmark. An outbreak was suspected. No ST82 isolates were found in environmental samples and no external source was established. Four putativeoutbreak ST82 isolates were retrospectively subjected to whole genome sequencing (WGS) followed by phylogenetic analyses with epidemiologically unrelated ST82 sequences. The four putative-outbreak ST82 sequences fell into two clades, the two clades were separated by ca 1,700 single nt polymorphisms (SNP) s when recombination regions were included but only by 12 to 21 SNPs when these were removed. A single putative-outbreak ST82 isolate sequence segregated in the first clade. The other three clustered in the second clade, where all included sequences had < 5 SNP differences between them. Intriguingly, this clade also comprised epidemiologically unrelated isolate sequences from the UK and Denmark dating back as early as 2011. The study confirms that recombination plays a major role in L. pneumophila evolution. On the other hand, strains belonging to the same ST can have only few SNP differences despite being sampled over both large timespans and geographic distances. These are two important factors to consider in outbreak investigations.

AB - Between July and November 2014, 15 communityacquired cases of Legionnaires’ disease (LD), including four with Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 sequence type (ST) 82, were diagnosed in Northern Zealand, Denmark. An outbreak was suspected. No ST82 isolates were found in environmental samples and no external source was established. Four putativeoutbreak ST82 isolates were retrospectively subjected to whole genome sequencing (WGS) followed by phylogenetic analyses with epidemiologically unrelated ST82 sequences. The four putative-outbreak ST82 sequences fell into two clades, the two clades were separated by ca 1,700 single nt polymorphisms (SNP) s when recombination regions were included but only by 12 to 21 SNPs when these were removed. A single putative-outbreak ST82 isolate sequence segregated in the first clade. The other three clustered in the second clade, where all included sequences had < 5 SNP differences between them. Intriguingly, this clade also comprised epidemiologically unrelated isolate sequences from the UK and Denmark dating back as early as 2011. The study confirms that recombination plays a major role in L. pneumophila evolution. On the other hand, strains belonging to the same ST can have only few SNP differences despite being sampled over both large timespans and geographic distances. These are two important factors to consider in outbreak investigations.

U2 - 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2017.22.25.30558

DO - 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2017.22.25.30558

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28662761

AN - SCOPUS:85021708403

VL - 22

JO - Eurosurveillance

JF - Eurosurveillance

SN - 1025-496X

IS - 25

ER -

ID: 196170559