Genetic diversity of Pneumocystis jirovecii in colonized Cuban infants and toddlers

•P. jirovecii colonizing Cuban infants and toddlers shows high genetic variability.•17 different MLSA profiles were detected in 16 airway samples.•Multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) offers a high level of genetic resolution. Pneumocystis jirovecii is a leading cause of opportunistic infections amon...

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Published inInfection, genetics and evolution Vol. 22; pp. 60 - 66
Main Authors Monroy-Vaca, Ernesto X., de Armas, Yaxsier, Illnait-Zaragozí, María T., Diaz, Raúl, Toraño, Gilda, Vega, Dania, Álvarez-Lam, Ileana, Calderón, Enrique J., Stensvold, Christen R.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.03.2014
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Summary:•P. jirovecii colonizing Cuban infants and toddlers shows high genetic variability.•17 different MLSA profiles were detected in 16 airway samples.•Multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) offers a high level of genetic resolution. Pneumocystis jirovecii is a leading cause of opportunistic infections among immunocompromised patients. The aim of this study was to determine the genetic diversity of P. jirovecii from colonized Cuban infants and toddlers by analysis of four genetic loci: mitochondrial large subunit (mtLSU) rRNA, cytochrome b (CYB), superoxide dismutase (SOD) and β-tubulin (β-tub). We determined the multilocus profiles based on concatenated genotype data (multilocus genotype; MLG) and nucleotide sequences (multilocus sequence analysis; MLSA) respectively, calculated the discriminatory power of each analysis, and investigated possible associations with demographic and clinical data. Sixteen of 51 PCR-positive nasopharyngeal swab specimens (years 2010–2013) with high P. jirovecii load were selected for downstream analysis. In mixed allelic profiles all genotypes/nucleotide sequence patterns were considered separately. All samples could be genotyped based on mtLSU, CYB and β-tub locus. However, the SOD locus could be successfully amplified in only 7/16 (44%) specimens. Eight different P. jirovecii MLGs were identified among the 16 cases and eight samples presented identical MLG (MLG 1). Seventeen MLSA profiles were distinguished. No statistical association between genotypes or MLGs and demographic or clinical data could be identified. For MLSA the higher discriminatory power (S=0.976) was observed. The combination of mtLSU, CYB and β-tub loci proved to be useful for molecular epidemiology studies of P. jirovecii. A total of 17 different MLSA profiles observed in 16 specimens indicated high genetic variability of P. jirovecii circulating in colonized Cuban infants and toddlers.
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ISSN:1567-1348
1567-7257
DOI:10.1016/j.meegid.2013.12.024