Abstract

BackgroundTuberculosis (TB) still constitutes a major public health problem in Malaysia. The identification and genotyping based characterization of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) isolates causing the disease is important to determine the effectiveness of the control and surveillance programs.ObjectivesThis study intended a first assessment of spoligotyping-based MTBC genotypic diversity in Malaysia followed by a comparison of strains with those prevailing in neighboring countries by comparison with an international MTBC genotyping database.MethodsSpoligotyping was performed on a total of 220 M. tuberculosis clinical isolates collected in Kelantan and Kuala Lumpur. The results were compared with the SITVIT2 international database of the Pasteur Institute of Guadeloupe.ResultsSpoligotyping revealed 77 different patterns: 22 corresponded to orphan patterns while 55 patterns containing 198 isolates were assigned a Spoligo International Type (SIT) designation in the database (the latter included 6 newly created SITs). The eight most common SITs grouped 141 isolates (5 to 56 strains per cluster) as follows: SIT1/Beijing, n = 56, 25.5%; SIT745/EAI1-SOM, n = 33, 15.0%; SIT591/EAI6-BGD1, n = 13, 5.9%; SIT256/EAI5, n = 12, 5.5%; SIT236/EAI5, n = 10, 4.6%; SIT19/EAI2-Manila, n = 9, 4.1%; SIT89/EAI2-Nonthaburi, n = 5, 2.3%; and SIT50/H3, n = 3, 1.4%. The association between city of isolation and lineages was statistically significant; Haarlem and T lineages being higher in Kuala Lumpur (p<0.01). However, no statistically significant differences were noted when comparing drug resistance vs. major lineages, nor between gender and clades.ConclusionsThe ancestral East-African-Indian (EAI) lineage was most predominant followed by the Beijing lineage. A comparison of strains with those prevailing in neighboring countries in South Asia, East Asia and South East Asia underlined the phylogeographical specificity of SIT745 for Malaysia, and its probable ongoing evolution with locally evolved strains sharing a specific signature characterized by absence of spacers 37, 38, and 40. Pending complementary genotyping confirmation, we propose that SIT745/EAI-SOM is tentatively reclassified as SIT745/EAI-MYS.

Highlights

  • Despite a recently observed decrease in number of Tuberculosis (TB) cases, in 2012 it led to an estimated 8.6 million new cases and 1.3 million death worldwide – including 320,000 deaths among TB/HIV co infected patients [1]

  • This goal would require a better understanding of how tubercle bacilli are transmitted, which clones are involved in ongoing transmission and drug resistance, and identify subpopulations at risk – questions that would prove difficult to answer without the support of molecular epidemiology

  • 83.6% of M. tuberculosis isolates were from patients in Kelantan and 16.4% were from Kuala Lumpur

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Summary

Introduction

Despite a recently observed decrease in number of Tuberculosis (TB) cases, in 2012 it led to an estimated 8.6 million new cases and 1.3 million death worldwide – including 320,000 deaths among TB/HIV co infected patients [1]. Based on recent reviews on Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) molecular typing methods [7] and strategies and innovations in the broad field of TB molecular epidemiology [8], we opted for spoligotyping which is one of the most widely used methods for an initial assessment of MTBC genotypic diversity. This polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based technique relies on the presence or absence of 43 unique spacer sequences in the direct repeat (DR) locus of the M. tuberculosis genome, useful both for simultaneous detection and typing of M. tuberculosis strains [9]. The association between city of isolation and lineages was statistically significant; Haarlem and T lineages being higher in Kuala Lumpur

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