Abstract
Neisseria meningitidis is an important cause of meningococcal disease globally. Sequence type (ST)-11 clonal complex (cc11) is a hypervirulent meningococcal lineage historically associated with serogroup C capsule and is believed to have acquired the W capsule through a C to W capsular switching event. We studied the sequence of capsule gene cluster (cps) and adjoining genomic regions of 524 invasive W cc11 strains isolated globally. We identified recombination breakpoints corresponding to two distinct recombination events within W cc11: A 8.4-kb recombinant region likely acquired from W cc22 including the sialic acid/glycosyl-transferase gene, csw resulted in a C!W change in capsular phenotype and a 13.7-kb recombinant segment likely acquired from Y cc23 lineage includes 4.5 kb of cps genes and 8.2 kb downstream of the cps cluster resulting in allelic changes in capsule translocation genes. A vast majority of W cc11 strains (497/524, 94.8%) retain both recombination events as evidenced by sharing identical or very closely related capsular allelic profiles. These data suggest that the W cc11 capsular switch involved two separate recombination events and that current global W cc11 meningococcal disease is caused by strains bearing this mosaic capsular switch.
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Mustapha, M. M., Marsh, J. W., Krauland, M. G., Fernandez, J. O., De Lemos, A. P. S., Dunning Hotopp, J. C., … Harrison, L. H. (2016). Genomic investigation reveals highly conserved, mosaic, recombination events associated with capsular switching among invasive neisseria meningitidis serogroup W sequence type (ST)-11 Strains. Genome Biology and Evolution, 8(6), 2065–2075. https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evw122
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