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Volume 24, Number 12—December 2018
Dispatch

In-Host Adaptation of Salmonella enterica Serotype Dublin during Prosthetic Hip Joint Infection

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Author affiliations: University of Versailles Saint-Quentin, Montigny-le-Bretonneux, France (F. El Sayed, G. Sapriel, B. Heym, H.-J. Garchon, J.-L. Gaillard); Hôpital Ambroise Paré, Boulogne-Billancourt, France (F. El Sayed, A. Gruber, T. Bauer, B. Heym, C. Dupont, J.-L. Gaillard, M. Rottman); Atelier de Bioinformatique, Paris, France (G. Sapriel); Institut Pasteur, Paris (N. Fawal, S. Le Hello); Hôpital Raymond Poincaré, Garches, France (M. Rottman)

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Abstract

Genome degradation has been central to the adaptation of Salmonella enterica serotypes to their hosts throughout evolution. We witnessed the patho-adaptation of a strain of Salmonella Dublin (a cattle-adapted serotype) to a human host during the course of a recurrent prosthetic hip joint infection evolving over several years.

Salmonella enterica serotype Dublin is a host-adapted bacterium with cattle as a predominant reservoir and is responsible for invasive, potentially life-threatening infections in humans (1,2). In France, the epidemiology of Salmonella Dublin infections among humans corroborates surveillance data from the United States (1). Salmonella Dublin causes substantially more bloodstream infections and hospitalizations than other Salmonella serotypes. It is also much more likely to be isolated in metastatic foci of infection secondary to bacteremia. The prevalence of prosthetic joints in Salmonella Dublin patients is significantly greater than for other Salmonella cases (Table).

Host adaptation is central to pathogen evolution and is associated with gene acquisition, genome degradation (gene inactivation or deletion), or both. Genome degradation has played a major role in the adaptation of S. enterica serotypes Typhi and Paratyphi A to the human host throughout evolution (3). Degradation also has been recently reported in a severely immunocompromised patient in whom recurrent systemic Salmonella Enteritidis infections developed over 15 years (4). We report the phenotypic and genomic changes undergone by Salmonella Dublin throughout a recurrent prosthetic hip infection in an immunocompetent patient.

The Study

In May 2011, a 74-year-old woman with bilateral hip prostheses (implanted in 1998 [right] and 2001 [left]) was admitted to intensive care for sepsis and left hip pain (Technical Appendix Figure). Blood cultures and a joint aspiration yielded pure cultures of Salmonella spp. She underwent debridement and implant retention surgery, followed by a 6-week intravenous course of cefotaxime and ciprofloxacin. Three years later, she sought care at the emergency department with acute-onset fever and prosthesis joint infection of the right hip and underwent right hip debridement and implant retention surgery. Blood cultures, joint aspirates, and all interoperative periprosthetic tissue samples yielded Salmonella spp. The patient received 2 weeks of intravenous amoxicillin and oral ofloxacin, was discharged, and received oral antimicrobial drugs for 10 more weeks. Six weeks after surgery, the surgical wound was healed, and the patient walked normally. One year later (2015), her primary care physician referred her to the hospital because of night fevers without local signs or implant dysfunction. Radioleucoscintigraphy showed right hip inflammation. Bilateral hip biopsies were performed, and the right hip biopsy sample tested positive for Salmonella spp. A right hip 1-stage exchange procedure was performed. All intraoperative periprosthetic tissue samples yielded Salmonella spp. A 6-week course of intravenous therapy with ceftriaxone and ciprofloxacin was administered. One year later (2016), the patient appeared to be free from infection and walked normally.

We characterized isolates by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (Bruker Daltonik GmbH, Bremen, Germany) and serotyping (French National Reference Center for Salmonella). We assessed carbohydrate metabolic activity using the API50CH system (bioMérieux, Marcy-l’Etoile, France) and biofilm formation using crystal violet (5). Antimicrobial susceptibility testing was performed using 2015 EUCAST (European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing) guidelines (http://www.eucast.org/clinical_breakpoints/). We conducted high-throughput whole-genome sequencing using the Illumina NextSeq 500 system (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA). For each isolate, the paired-end reads were aligned against 2 Salmonella Dublin CT_020221853 and 3246 reference genomes to increase the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) detection (GenBank accession nos. CP001144.1 and CM001151.1, respectively) (6) (online Technical Appendix). We annotated putative coding sequences using GeneMark (7) and performed ortholog identification, based on the prototypal human reference genome CT_020221853, using BLAST+ (8) with a 1 × 10-10 E-value threshold and confirmed by a synteny conservation check. We first identified candidate pseudogenized sequences using a proteome/proteome BLASTp approach (https://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi): protein sequences of strains Str.2011, Str2014, and Str2015 with Query Coverage <80% relative to the reference strain orthologs were selected as potentially pseudogenized sequences. We then analyzed nucleic acid level sequences corresponding to the previously selected candidates to confirm the change in coding sequences, and to precisely determine the genetic event kind of nucleic acid change involved (frame-shift mutation or indel).

Figure

Thumbnail of Genomic and phenotypic characteristics of Salmonella enterica serotype Dublin isolates Str.2011, Str.2014, and Str.2015 from a 74-year-old woman who had recurrent infections involving hip joint prostheses, France. A) Tree constructed after mapping the sequences of the isolates to reference genomes of Salmonella Dublin strains CT_020221853 and 3246 (GenBank accession nos. CP001144.1 and CM001151.1, respectively). The 4 nonsynonymous SNPs and the corresponding coding genes are shown.

Figure. Genomic and phenotypic characteristics of Salmonella enterica serotype Dublin isolates Str.2011, Str.2014, and Str.2015 from a 74-year-old woman who had recurrent infections involving hip joint prostheses, France. A) Tree constructed after...

We studied 3 patient strains: Str.2011 (May 2011, left hip intraoperative periprosthetic tissue [HIPT]), Str.2014 (April 2014, right HIPT), and Str.2015 (June 2015, right HIPT). Unlike Str.2011, Str.2014 and Str.2015 were nonmotile with no detectable H antigen and had lost the ability to use 9 of the 18 carbohydrates used by Str.2011, with slight profile variations (Figure). All strains could form biofilms and had identical wild-type antimicrobial drug susceptibility profiles and unchanged MICs for β-lactams and quinolones, without mutations in gyrA, gyrB, parC, and parE genes. All 3 strains belonged to the sequence type 10 Salmonella Dublin population (http://mlst.warwick.ac.uk/mlst/dbs/Senterica). The mapping of Str.2011, Str.2014, and Str.2015 genomes against the Salmonella Dublin CT_020221853 and str.3246 reference genomes detected 451 and 268 SNPs, respectively, whereas the 3 patient strains differed by only 6 SNPs, strongly suggesting they derived from a single infecting strain. Four SNPs were nonsynonymous in coding genes; 2 SNPs were in an intergenic region (Figure).

Comparative proteome/proteome analysis detected putative pseudogenized sequences that were due to indels within 3 coding sequences in Str.2014 and Str.2015. These pseudogenes were involved in carbohydrate transport (ptsA) (14-bp deletion), lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthesis (waaY) (16-bp insertion), and protein synthesis (tufB) (790-bp deletion, total gene deletion); we identified no pseudogene among the genes of the flagellar regulon. The pseudogene involved in carbohydrate transport, ptsA, controls the import of carbohydrates, such as mannose, fructose, and N-acetyl-glucosamine (9), 3 carbohydrates used by Str.2011 but not Str.2014 or Str.2015. Mutation of the LPS biosynthesis gene waaY in Str.2014 and Str.2015 had apparently no effect on the expression of the Salmonella Dublin O antigen but might have affected flagellar assembly and function, as described for Salmonella Typhimurium and Escherichia coli (10,11). The mutation of tufB in Str.2014 and Str.2015 leads to a one third decrease in the production of the translation elongation factor EF-Tu (the other two thirds is synthetized from tufA) (12).

The patient in this study had no detectable gallbladder or intestinal carriage, which has been associated with recurrent Salmonella infections (13). She had no apparent immunodeficiency, a well-documented risk factor for invasive Salmonella Dublin infection. Salmonella Dublin most likely persisted as a biofilm at the surface of the implants, leading to recurrence of chronic disease despite prolonged antimicrobial therapy until the ablation of the infected material (14). The genomic changes we observed involved carbohydrate metabolism and LPS biosynthesis, as similarly reported for Salmonella Enteritidis isolates recovered from the bloodstream of a severely immunocompromised patient, years after the initial infection (4). Changes in carbon source availability are known to affect virulence gene regulators. In the presence/absence of a specific carbon source, specific virulence genes can be turned on or switched off, enabling pathogens to adapt to their new niche (9). Because LPS and flagellin are potent triggers of the inflammatory response, LPS alterations and the loss of flagellin expression (15) might have limited the host’s innate immune response to Salmonella Dublin and facilitated its persistence at the implant interface.

Conclusions

This clinical case and other recent reports of patients with chronic infections highlight the remarkable adaptability of pathogens to a new niche. More specifically, these results show that the process of patho-adaptation of Salmonella serotypes may be extremely rapid and relies on mechanisms of genomic reshaping reminiscent of those found during the evolution of this pathogen in contact with humans. Enhanced awareness is warranted for Salmonella Dublin, especially in the elderly bearing prostheses.

Ms. El Sayed is a postgraduate fellow in clinical bacteriology of Ambroise Paré Teaching Hospital in Paris. Her research interests include bacteria adaptation and epidemiology in bone and joint infections context.

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Acknowledgments

We thank Vincent Enouf and Laetitia Fabre for processing the whole-genome sequencing and microbiological information, respectively. We are grateful to all the microbiological laboratories that participated in the human Salmonella network for processing the isolates.

This work was supported by the French National Reference Center for Escherichia coli, Shigella, and Salmonella, co-funded by Santé Publique France and belonging to the Integrative Biology of Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratory of Excellence funded by the French Government Investissement d’Avenir program (grant no. ANR-10-LABX-62-IBEID).

Genomics sequence assemblies used in this project are available online on the National Center for Biotechnology Information network under accession no. PRJNA433355 (available at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/433355).

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References

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DOI: 10.3201/eid2412.180214

Original Publication Date: October 29, 2018

Table of Contents – Volume 24, Number 12—December 2018

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Simon Le Hello, Institut Pasteur, Unité de Recherche et d’Expertise des Bactéries Pathogènes Entériques, 28, rue du Docteur Roux, 75724 Paris CEDEX 15, France; ; Faten El Sayed, UFR des Sciences de la Santé Simone Veil, UVSQ, 2, avenue Source de la Bièvre, 78180 Montigny-le-Bretonneux, France

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Page created: November 20, 2018
Page updated: November 20, 2018
Page reviewed: November 20, 2018
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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