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Genomic study of epidemic dysentery reveals how Europe exported a scourge worldwide
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Update time: 2016-03-25
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The largest genetic study on the bacterium responsible for epidemic dysentery has revealed that the Shigella dysenteriae pathogen, which remains a real scourge in Africa and Asia, probably originated in Europe.

This research, published in the journal Nature Microbiology, also charts the development of the pathogen's resistance to antibiotics.

Scientists from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Institut Pasteur in Paris and international collaborators have uncovered hitherto unknown links between the various outbreaks that have occurred through history. One of the worst scourges to afflict humans throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, dysentery was transmitted from one continent to another via migratory movements and military operations.

The bacterium Shigella dysenteriae type 1, causes life-threatening bloody diarrhea, and has been responsible for thousands of deaths, especially amongst children in the developing world. The last big epidemic in Central America killed 20,000 people between 1969 and 1972. Despite the isolation of S. dysenteriae strains globally, the origin of each dysentery epidemic and the links between them has remained unclear.

To provide a detailed understanding of this disease, a team of scientists led by Prof Nicholas Thomson from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, and senior author Dr Fran?ois-Xavier Weill from the Institut Pasteur undertook a huge genomic study using high throughput technologies for bacterial genome sequencing and bioinformatics. They analyzed more than 330 strains of S. dysenteriae type 1 isolated between 1915 (in soldiers taking part in the First World War Gallipoli campaign) and 2011. The strains had been collected by 35 international institutes in 66 countries.

The team found that the type 1 strain has existed since at least the eighteenth century, and spread throughout the globe. Contrary to popular belief, the study showed that the S. dysenteriae pathogen currently endemic in Africa and Asia is of European origin.

Prof Nicholas Thomson, leader of the Bacterial Genomics and Evolution group at the Sanger Institute, said: "Analyzing the full genomes of all theseShigella dysenteriae strains collected over a huge timeframe and from such an array of different countries provided us with an unprecedented insight into the historical spread of this pathogen. This was needed because there are still many unanswered questions relating this infamous and important bacterial pathogen. It was achieved by combining high resolution genomic research data with the detailed information recording the provenance of each sample from a large number of dedicated groups."

By identifying different genetic lineages, the scientists were able to trace the path of the bacterium worldwide over time, showing that European colonialism and migration helped spread the pathogen.

European S. dysenteriae spread to America, Africa and Asia between 1889 and 1903, aided by European emigration to America and the colonization of territories in Africa and Asia. The bacterium reappeared in Europe during the First and Second World Wars, before dying out in Europe. However, it continued to spread across Asia, Africa and Central America with violent outbreaks, and several epidemic waves then spread to Africa and South-East Asia from the Indian subcontinent.

Since the first bacteria were isolated well before the use of antibiotics, study of the collection has revealed that the first antibiotic resistance appeared in Asia and America in the mid-1960s. The bacterium then acquired resistance genes against most classes of antibiotics -- fewer than 1 per cent of bacterial strains have remained susceptible to antibiotics since the 1990s. Scientists consider it inevitable and a cause for concern that dysentery bacteria will acquire resistance to the last-resort antibiotic classes.

Dr Fran?ois-Xavier Weill, Research Director at the Enteric Bacterial Pathogens Unit, Institut Pasteur, said: "This bacterium is still in circulation, and could be responsible for future epidemics if conditions should prove favorable -- such as a large gathering of people without access to drinking water or treatment of human waste. This study highlights the need for an effective vaccine, which will be crucial for controlling this disease in the future in view of the reduced efficacy of antibiotics."

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The above post is reprinted from materials provided by Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.

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