Stepwise pathogenic evolution of textitMycobacterium abscessus
Apr 1, 2021ยท,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,ยท
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Josephine M Bryant
Karen P Brown
Sophie Burbaud
Isobel Everall
Juan M Belardinelli
Daniela Rodriguez-Rincon
Dorothy M Grogono
Chelsea M Peterson
Deepshikha Verma
Ieuan E Evans
Christopher Ruis
Aaron Weimann
Divya Arora
Sony Malhotra
Bridget Bannerman
Charlotte Passemar
Kerra Templeton
Gordon MacGregor
Kasim Jiwa
Andrew J Fisher
Tom L Blundell
Diane J Ordway
Mary Jackson
Julian Parkhill
R Andres Floto
Abstract
Although almost all mycobacterial species are saprophytic environmental organisms, a few, such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis, have evolved to cause transmissible human infection. By analyzing the recent emergence and spread of the environmental organism M. abscessus through the global cystic fibrosis population, we have defined key, generalizable steps involved in the pathogenic evolution of mycobacteria. We show that epigenetic modifiers, acquired through horizontal gene transfer, cause saltational increases in the pathogenic potential of specific environmental clones. Allopatric parallel evolution during chronic lung infection then promotes rapid increases in virulence through mutations in a discrete gene network; these mutations enhance growth within macrophages but impair fomite survival. As a consequence, we observe constrained pathogenic evolution while person-to-person transmission remains indirect, but postulate accelerated pathogenic adaptation once direct transmission is possible, as observed for M. tuberculosis Our findings indicate how key interventions, such as early treatment and cross-infection control, might restrict the spread of existing mycobacterial pathogens and prevent new, emergent ones.
Type
Publication
Science