One Health Genomic Study of Human and Animal Klebsiella pneumoniae Isolated at Diagnostic Laboratories on a Small Caribbean Island

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

One Health Genomic Study of Human and Animal Klebsiella pneumoniae Isolated at Diagnostic Laboratories on a Small Caribbean Island. / Butaye, Patrick; Stegger, Marc; Moodley, Arshnee; Damborg, Peter; Williams, Andrea; Halliday-Simmonds, Iona; Guardabassi, Luca.

In: Antibiotics, Vol. 11, No. 1, 42, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Butaye, P, Stegger, M, Moodley, A, Damborg, P, Williams, A, Halliday-Simmonds, I & Guardabassi, L 2022, 'One Health Genomic Study of Human and Animal Klebsiella pneumoniae Isolated at Diagnostic Laboratories on a Small Caribbean Island', Antibiotics, vol. 11, no. 1, 42. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11010042

APA

Butaye, P., Stegger, M., Moodley, A., Damborg, P., Williams, A., Halliday-Simmonds, I., & Guardabassi, L. (2022). One Health Genomic Study of Human and Animal Klebsiella pneumoniae Isolated at Diagnostic Laboratories on a Small Caribbean Island. Antibiotics, 11(1), [42]. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11010042

Vancouver

Butaye P, Stegger M, Moodley A, Damborg P, Williams A, Halliday-Simmonds I et al. One Health Genomic Study of Human and Animal Klebsiella pneumoniae Isolated at Diagnostic Laboratories on a Small Caribbean Island. Antibiotics. 2022;11(1). 42. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11010042

Author

Butaye, Patrick ; Stegger, Marc ; Moodley, Arshnee ; Damborg, Peter ; Williams, Andrea ; Halliday-Simmonds, Iona ; Guardabassi, Luca. / One Health Genomic Study of Human and Animal Klebsiella pneumoniae Isolated at Diagnostic Laboratories on a Small Caribbean Island. In: Antibiotics. 2022 ; Vol. 11, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{cd4a68c0db474071ad7c48b2d5c8936c,
title = "One Health Genomic Study of Human and Animal Klebsiella pneumoniae Isolated at Diagnostic Laboratories on a Small Caribbean Island",
abstract = "Klebsiella pneumoniae causes a variety of infections in both humans and animals. In this study, we characterised the genomes of human and animal isolates from two diagnostic laboratories on St. Kitts, a small Caribbean island inhabited by a large population of vervet monkeys. In view of the increased chances of direct or indirect contact with humans and other animal species, we used the One Health approach to assess transmission of K. pneumoniae across host species by sequencing 82 presumptive K. pneumoniae clinical isolates from humans (n = 51), vervets (n = 21), horses (n = 5), dogs (n = 4) and a cat (n = 1). Whole genome sequencing (WGS) was carried out using Illumina technology. De novo assembly was performed in CLC Genomics Workbench v.11.0. Single nucleotide polymorphisms were detected using NASP followed by phylogenetic analysis using IQ-TREE. Virulence and antimicrobial resistance gene contents were analysed using the Kleborate and CGE pipelines. WGS-based analysis showed that 72 isolates were K. pneumoniae sensu stricto and five K. quasipneumoniae and five K. variicola. K. pneumoniae isolates belonged to 35 sequence types (ST), three of which were occasionally shared between humans and animals: ST23, ST37 and ST307. The ST23 strains from vervets formed a separate cluster amongst publicly available sequenced ST23 strains, indicating the presence of a specific vervet sublineage. Animal strains harbored fewer resistance genes and displayed distinct virulence traits that appeared to be host-specific in vervet isolates. Our results show that K. pneumoniae infections on this Caribbean island are usually caused by host-specific lineages.",
keywords = "Animal, Klebsiella pneumoniae, One Health, Vervet, Whole genome sequencing",
author = "Patrick Butaye and Marc Stegger and Arshnee Moodley and Peter Damborg and Andrea Williams and Iona Halliday-Simmonds and Luca Guardabassi",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.3390/antibiotics11010042",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "Antibiotics",
issn = "2079-6382",
publisher = "M D P I AG",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - One Health Genomic Study of Human and Animal Klebsiella pneumoniae Isolated at Diagnostic Laboratories on a Small Caribbean Island

AU - Butaye, Patrick

AU - Stegger, Marc

AU - Moodley, Arshnee

AU - Damborg, Peter

AU - Williams, Andrea

AU - Halliday-Simmonds, Iona

AU - Guardabassi, Luca

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Klebsiella pneumoniae causes a variety of infections in both humans and animals. In this study, we characterised the genomes of human and animal isolates from two diagnostic laboratories on St. Kitts, a small Caribbean island inhabited by a large population of vervet monkeys. In view of the increased chances of direct or indirect contact with humans and other animal species, we used the One Health approach to assess transmission of K. pneumoniae across host species by sequencing 82 presumptive K. pneumoniae clinical isolates from humans (n = 51), vervets (n = 21), horses (n = 5), dogs (n = 4) and a cat (n = 1). Whole genome sequencing (WGS) was carried out using Illumina technology. De novo assembly was performed in CLC Genomics Workbench v.11.0. Single nucleotide polymorphisms were detected using NASP followed by phylogenetic analysis using IQ-TREE. Virulence and antimicrobial resistance gene contents were analysed using the Kleborate and CGE pipelines. WGS-based analysis showed that 72 isolates were K. pneumoniae sensu stricto and five K. quasipneumoniae and five K. variicola. K. pneumoniae isolates belonged to 35 sequence types (ST), three of which were occasionally shared between humans and animals: ST23, ST37 and ST307. The ST23 strains from vervets formed a separate cluster amongst publicly available sequenced ST23 strains, indicating the presence of a specific vervet sublineage. Animal strains harbored fewer resistance genes and displayed distinct virulence traits that appeared to be host-specific in vervet isolates. Our results show that K. pneumoniae infections on this Caribbean island are usually caused by host-specific lineages.

AB - Klebsiella pneumoniae causes a variety of infections in both humans and animals. In this study, we characterised the genomes of human and animal isolates from two diagnostic laboratories on St. Kitts, a small Caribbean island inhabited by a large population of vervet monkeys. In view of the increased chances of direct or indirect contact with humans and other animal species, we used the One Health approach to assess transmission of K. pneumoniae across host species by sequencing 82 presumptive K. pneumoniae clinical isolates from humans (n = 51), vervets (n = 21), horses (n = 5), dogs (n = 4) and a cat (n = 1). Whole genome sequencing (WGS) was carried out using Illumina technology. De novo assembly was performed in CLC Genomics Workbench v.11.0. Single nucleotide polymorphisms were detected using NASP followed by phylogenetic analysis using IQ-TREE. Virulence and antimicrobial resistance gene contents were analysed using the Kleborate and CGE pipelines. WGS-based analysis showed that 72 isolates were K. pneumoniae sensu stricto and five K. quasipneumoniae and five K. variicola. K. pneumoniae isolates belonged to 35 sequence types (ST), three of which were occasionally shared between humans and animals: ST23, ST37 and ST307. The ST23 strains from vervets formed a separate cluster amongst publicly available sequenced ST23 strains, indicating the presence of a specific vervet sublineage. Animal strains harbored fewer resistance genes and displayed distinct virulence traits that appeared to be host-specific in vervet isolates. Our results show that K. pneumoniae infections on this Caribbean island are usually caused by host-specific lineages.

KW - Animal

KW - Klebsiella pneumoniae

KW - One Health

KW - Vervet

KW - Whole genome sequencing

U2 - 10.3390/antibiotics11010042

DO - 10.3390/antibiotics11010042

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35052919

AN - SCOPUS:85122196700

VL - 11

JO - Antibiotics

JF - Antibiotics

SN - 2079-6382

IS - 1

M1 - 42

ER -

ID: 289325686