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Molecular identification of streptomycin monoresistant mycobacterium tuberculosis related to multidrug-resistant W strain. (Research).


A distinct branch of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mycobacterium tuberculosis
n.
Tubercic bacillus.


Mycobacterium tuberculosis
 W phylogenetic phy·lo·ge·net·ic
adj.
1. Of or relating to phylogeny or phylogenetics.

2. Relating to or based on evolutionary development or history.
 lineage (W14 group) has been identified and characterized by various genotyping techniques. The W14 group comprises three strain variants: W14, W23, and W26, which accounted for 26 clinical isolates from the New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 metropolitan area. The W14 group shares a unique IS6110 hybridizing banding motif as well as distinct polymorphic GC-rich repetitive sequence and variable number tandem repeat A variable number tandem repeats (VNTR) is a short nucleotide sequence ranging from 14 to 100 nucleotides long that is organized into clusters of tandem repeats, usually repeated in the range of between 4 and 40 times per occurrence.  patterns. All W14 group members have high levels of streptomycin streptomycin (strĕp'tōmī`sĭn), antibiotic produced by soil bacteria of the genus Streptomyces and active against both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria (see Gram's stain), including species resistant to other  resistance. When the streptomycin resistance rpsL target gene was sequenced, all members of this strain family had an identical mutation in codon codon: see nucleic acid.  43. Patients infected with the W14 group were primarily of non-Hispanic black origin (77%); all were US-born. Including HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States.  positivity, 84% of the patients had at least one known risk factor for tuberculosis.

**********

With the advent of molecular techniques, tuberculosis (TB) investigators have a powerful tool to further the understanding of the transmission and phylogenetic properties of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Molecular techniques have been used to discriminate exogenous versus endogenous disease (1-3), investigate suspected outbreaks (2,4-6) and cases of laboratory cross-contamination (7-9), study transmission within a defined geographic setting (10,11), and demonstrate the occurrence of exogenous superinfection superinfection /su·per·in·fec·tion/ (-in-fek´shun) a new infection occurring in a patient having a preexisting infection, such as bacterial superinfection in viral respiratory disease or infection of a chronic hepatitis B carrier with  in immunocompetent im·mu·no·com·pe·tent
adj.
Having the normal bodily capacity to develop an immune response following exposure to an antigen.



im
 and immunocompromised immunocompromised /im·mu·no·com·pro·mised/ (-kom´pro-mizd) having the immune response attenuated by administration of immunosuppressive drugs, by irradiation, by malnutrition, or by certain disease processes (e.g., cancer).  patients (12,13).

Genotyping has facilitated identification and characterization of the W strain, a multidrug-resistant (MDR MDR,
n See multidrug resistance.

MDR,
n the abbreviation for minimum daily requirement, specifically the Minimum Daily Requirements for Specific Nutrients compiled by the United States Food and Drug Administration.
) clone associated primarily with nosocomial nosocomial /noso·co·mi·al/ (nos?o-ko´me-il) pertaining to or originating in a hospital.

nos·o·co·mi·al
adj.
1. Of or relating to a hospital.

2.
 transmission in hospitals and detention facilities in New York City (NYC NYC
abbr.
New York City


NYC New York City
) in the early 1990s (14-17). In such studies, molecular markers were used to confirm and characterize the W strain outbreak and to elucidate a plausible evolutionary scenario for the sequential acquisition of multidrug resistance multidrug resistance,
n the adaptation of tumor cells or infectious agents to resist chemotherapeutic agents.
 (14,17,18). In a recent study, when molecular techniques were applied in a population-based setting, genotyping identified a drug-susceptible group of isolates (W4) that represents a distinct branch of the W phylogenetic lineage. Members of this W4 group define a previously unidentified cluster of cases in a community in northern New Jersey; the cluster likely resulted from both historical and recent transmission (19). Although the W-MDR strain from NYC is clearly distinct from the drug-susceptible W4 group, both groups of isolates evolved from a common ancestor (20).

Strains that define the W family have several distinguishing genotypes in common: 1) they belong to principal genetic group 1 (17,21); 2) they have similar spoligotype patterns, characterized by a deletion of spacers 1-34 and the corresponding repeat in the direct repeats (DR) region (19, 22-24), an alteration that defines spoligopattern S00034 and closely related spoligotypes; 3) they contain a unique insertion in the origin of replication The origin of replication (also called the replication origin) is a particular DNA sequence at which DNA replication is initiated. DNA replication may proceed from this point bidirectionally or unidirectionally.  (19,20) and in the NTF NTF No Transaction Fee
NTF National Turkey Federation
NTF No Trouble Found
NTF National Transfer Format (UK Geographic Data Standard) aka BS7567
NTF Nigeria Trust Fund
NTF National Transonic Facility
NTF Noise Transfer Function
 locus (20,25). Strains grouped in the W or Beijing family are prevalent in China, Southeast Asia (26,27), Russia, and other former Soviet regions (unpub. data) and have recently been reported in South Africa (23).

By multiple genetic techniques, we investigated a cluster of NYC M. tuberculosis M. tuberculosis,
n the bacterium responsible for tuberculosis, generally a respiratory infection in man; nonrespiratory tuberculosis is considered an indicator disease for AIDS. See also tuberculosis.
 isolates (W14 group) that are resistant to at least streptomycin and share identical or closely related DNA fingerprint DNA fingerprint
n.
An individual's unique sequence of DNA base pairs. Also called genetic fingerprint.
 patterns. Results from multiple typing methods were used to show the relatedness of the three IS6110 fingerprint patterns, W14, W23, and W26 and their evolution.

Materials and Methods

Mycobacterial mycobacterial

emanating from or pertaining to mycobacterium.


mycobacterial granuloma
may be caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (see cutaneous tuberculosis), M.
 Isolates and Patients

A total of 26 isolates from 26 patients were identified and grouped based on their IS6110 fingerprint patterns. The IS6110 fingerprint archive at the Public Health Research Institute Tuberculosis Center (PHRI PHRI Pacific Health Research Institute (since 1960; Honolulu, Hawaii)
PHRI Pintabian Horse Registry, Inc (Karlstad, Minnesota) 
 TB Center) includes fingerprint patterns from >13,000 M. tuberculosis clinical specimens characterized since 1992. More than 80% of the isolates were cultured from NYC and New Jersey cases; remaining samples are from seven other states and international sources.

The W14 group isolates are part of a NYC convenience sample, which represents 44% (n=6,655) of the total number of culture- positive TB cases reported in 1992-1999 (~15,000). Isolates were collected for numerous outbreak, surveillance, and research studies (14,17,28-31). Basic clinical, demographic, and routine contact-tracing information was obtained for 22 of the 26 patients; data for 21 cases were obtained from the NYC Tuberculosis Control Program surveillance database; the one exception was from the New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services. Isolates originated from 16 institutions, including NYC hospitals and correctional facilities. Laboratory cross-contamination was ruled out since none of the clinical specimens were cultured or processed during the same time period, and all patients had well-documented TB.

IS6110 DNA Fingerprinting DNA fingerprinting or DNA profiling, any of several similar techniques for analyzing and comparing DNA from separate sources, used especially in law enforcement to identify suspects from hair, blood, semen, or other biological materials found at  and Pattern Interpretation

M. tuberculosis isolates were cultured on Lowenstein-Jensen slants and grown at 37 [degrees] C for 3 to 5 weeks. IS6110 DNA fingerprint analyses were performed according to a standard method using both the 5' and 3' fragments of the IS6110 genetic element (32). Hybridization hybridization /hy·brid·iza·tion/ (hi?brid-i-za´shun)
1. crossbreeding; the act or process of producing hybrids.

2. molecular hybridization

3.
 patterns were compared on a Sun Sparc5 Workstation by using the BioImage Whole Band Analyzer software version 3.4 (Genomic Solutions, Ann Arbor, MI). The Jaccard matching method and an unweighted pair group method that used arithmetic averages and average linkage clustering identified related patterns, in accordance with the protocol of the National Tuberculosis Genotyping and Surveillance Network, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center.  (CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

CDC - Control Data Corporation
). Nomenclature of the DNA fingerprint patterns was as follows: Isolates with identical banding patterns were assigned the same arbitrary letter code (e.g., W, J, AF). IS6110 patterns that resembled but were not identical to one of these patterns were denoted by addition of a number (e.g., W14, W23).

Other Southern Blot Hybridization Southern blot hybridization Southern blotting Molecular biology A method delineated by EM Southern for detecting and manipulating specific DNA sequences previously separated by gel electrophoresis.  Probes: Polymorphic GC-Rich Repetitive Sequence and Direct Repeat

Chromosomal DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 was restricted with Alu I and hybridized with the polymorphic GC-rich repetitive sequence (PGRS PGRS Postal Grievance Research System (software) ) probe (GenBank accession number M95490) (33). Direct-repeat restriction fragment-length polymorphism (RFLP RFLP
abbr.
restriction fragment length polymorphism



RFLP

restriction fragment length polymorphism.

RFLP 
) primers DRa and DRb were used to generate a DR probe with H37Rv (strain ATCC ATCC American Type Culture Collection, see there  35177) as a template. The DR amplicon was used as a probe to re-hybridize both membranes (Pvu II and Alu I) previously generated for IS6110 and PGRS genotyping, respectively (34).

Spacer Oligonucleotide Genotyping (Spoligotyping)

Spoligotyping was performed according to the protocol described by Kamerbeek et al. (34). The spoligotype of the 26 samples belonging to the W14 group was compared against a spoligotype database maintained by the Wadsworth Center, New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 State Department of Health, comprising >2,500 clinical specimens.

Variable Number of Tandem Repeats

Tandem repeat loci loci

[L.] plural of locus.

loci Plural of locus, see there
 ETR-A to ETR-E were amplified by polymerase chain reaction polymerase chain reaction (pŏl`ĭmərās') (PCR), laboratory process in which a particular DNA segment from a mixture of DNA chains is rapidly replicated, producing a large, readily analyzed sample of a piece of DNA; the process is  (PCR PCR polymerase chain reaction.

PCR
abbr.
polymerase chain reaction


Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) 
) and analyzed by gel electrophoresis to generate variable number of tandem-repeat (VNTR VNTR Variable Number of Tandem Repeat(s) ) allele allele (əlēl`): see genetics.
allele

Any one of two or more alternative forms of a gene that may occur alternatively at a given site on a chromosome.
 profiles, as described by Frothingham and Meeker-O'Connell (35). Each digit of the allele profile represents the number of tandem-repeat copies at a particular locus. The patterns were compared against the PHRI TB Center VNTR database (~500 isolates) and profiles at the Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Centers database (745 isolates, 85 in the W phylogenetic lineage) (19).

Streptomycin/Isoniazid/Rifampin/Ethambutol and Ethionamide Susceptibility Testing

Primary drug resistance to streptomycin/isoniazid (INH INH
abbr.
isoniazid


isoniazid (INH)

Isotamine (CA), PMS Isoniazid (CA)

Pharmacologic class: Isonicotinic acid hydrazide

Therapeutic class: Antitubercular

)/rifampin/ethambutol (SIRE) was determined by using TB susceptibility Quad Plate I and II (Remel No. 3501). M. tuberculosis cultures were determined to be resistant to anti-microbial agents at concentrations [greater than or equal to] 1 [micro]g/mL for INH and rifampin rifampin (rĭfăm`pĭn), antibiotic used in the treatment of tuberculosis. It is also used to eliminate the meningococcus microorganism from carriers and to treat leprosy, or Hansen's disease. , 7.5 [micro]g/mL for ethambutol ethambutol /etham·bu·tol/ (e-tham´bu-tol) an antibacterial, specifically effective against Mycobacterium; used with one or more other antituberculous drugs in the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis, administered as the , and 10 [micro]g/mL for streptomycin. The MIC for streptomycin was determined for representative samples according to standard methodology by using the agar diffusion assay (36). Isolates were subcultured onto 7H10/ADC medium (Difco, Detroit, MI) containing 2 to 500 [micro]g/mL of streptomycin. The NYC Bureau of Laboratories performed pyrazinamide (PZA PZA Pyrazinamide, see there ) testing (37).

DNA Sequencing Streptomycin (rpsL) and INH (kat G) Resistance Genes

Analyses of the rpsL and katG genes were performed on a MicroGene Clipper 2 Dye Automated DNA Sequencer (Visible Genetics, Toronto, Ontario, Canada). Sequencing in the 5' and 3' directions was carried out simultaneously by using a two-dye system (Cy 5 and Cy 5.5; two-dye filter subsystem) to confirm mutations. The primers used to generate amplicons for sequencing were provided by Visible Genetics.

W-Strain Family Genotype

The principal genetic group was determined for each isolate as described (21). In addition, specific IS6110 insertion site mapping probes were used to determine the presence of insertions in the origin of replication and the NTF chromosomal region chromosomal region
n.
The part of a chromosome defined either by anatomical details, especially by banding, or by its linkage groups.
 (20,25). The region flanking the deletion in the DR locus commonly associated with the W family was analyzed by PCR amplification and comparative hybridization (23).

Results

The W Family Strain Collection The W14 fingerprint pattern was identified in a database of > 13,000 clinical specimens representing approximately 9,000 patients and 3,563 distinct IS6110 fingerprint patterns genotyped at the PHRI TB Center. From the total IS6110 fingerprint patterns archived (N=3,563), 357 similar yet distinct patterns representing 1,498 isolates were grouped into the W family database by using standard matching criteria. Twenty isolates had an identical hybridization pattern (W14); 6 other isolates shared closely related IS6110 fingerprint patterns (3 W23 and 3 W26). These 26 isolates with three IS6110 patterns (W14, W23, and W26) form the W14 group, a subgroup within the W phylogenetic lineage.

Molecular Features of W14 Group Isolates

The W14 group was originally defined on the basis of IS6110 patterns. The group includes three closely related fingerprints (W14, W23, and W26), with two characteristic common motifs (denoted by brackets in Figure 1A). Motifs A and B are unique to the W14 group. Southern blot hybridization of the Pvu II membrane with the 5'-IS6110 probe confirmed that the difference in IS6110 pattern between W23 and W26 was the product of two independent IS6110 insertions, rather than the outcome of a single RFLP event (Figure 1B).

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

PGRS probing showed a distinct hybridization pattern (P00026) for all 26 isolates in this group (Figure 1C). The P00026 pattern was used to segregate seg·re·gate  
v. seg·re·gat·ed, seg·re·gat·ing, seg·re·gates

v.tr.
1. To separate or isolate from others or from a main body or group. See Synonyms at isolate.

2.
 the W14 group isolates from all other clinical samples, including other W family groups in a PGRS database of > 600 isolates.

Results from five chromosomal loci (ETR-A to ETR-E) were combined as a VNTR allele profile. All isolates in the W14 group had the VNTR allele profile 42445. This allele profile was unique to the W14 group when compared with the isolates from the PHRI TB Center VNTR database (n=>500) and an independent collection archived in Durham VA Medical Center database (n=745). Together, these databases include 85 isolates of the W family, including isolates from Asia, Africa, the former Soviet Union, and the United States. However, the allele profile 42445 was closely related to other patterns found in members of the W family. The most common profile for the W family is 42435; all profiles identified to date within the W family differed from this profile by a single allele. These VNTR profiles include 32435, 42436, 42437, 4253, and the W14 group, which is defined by 42445 (19). Unlike other members of the W phylogenetic lineage, the W14 group has a unique spoligotype arbitrarily designated as S00069 (Figure 2). Spoligopattern S00069 differed from S00034 associated with other reported W family members by the absence of spacer number 40. Patterns obtained by rehybridizing the same membranes used for IS6110 and PGRS fingerprinting with the DRab probe suggested that the disruption of spacer 40 was not due to an IS6110 insertion (Figure 3). An IS6110 insertion within spacer 40 would have generated two DR hybridizing bands, including one of a higher molecular weight, as found in strain CDC1551 (Figure 3) (38). Pattern S00069 was unique to the W14 group when compared with the Wadsworth spoligotype database of >2,500 isolates. The disruption of spacer 40 did not affect either chromosomal flanking region. Hence, in agreement with the S00034 spoligotype that groups all W family isolates analyzed, the region upstream from spacer 35 was deleted in isolates with S00069.

All members of the W14 group have high-level resistance (MIC>500 [MICRO]g/mL) to streptomycin (ST[R.sup.R]). In addition, one W14 and one W23 isolate were resistant to INH (IN[H.sup.R]), one W14 was IN[H.sup.R] and ethambutol (EM[B.sup.R]) resistant, two W14 isolates were ethionamide (ET[H.sup.R]) resistant, and one W14 was ET[H.sup.R] and pyrazinamide (PZ[A.sup.R]) resistant (Figure 4). Except for the 26 isolates in the W14 group, no W family isolate from a U.S. case in our collection was streptomycin monoresistant.

DNA sequencing of the gene commonly associated with streptomycin resistance, the rpsL gene, identified a single mutation (codon 43: AAG AAG Association of American Geographers (Washington, DC)
AAG Assistant Attorney General
AAG Asociación Argentina de Golf
AAG Anti-Aircraft Gun
AAG Assistant Adjutant General
AAG Australian Association of Gerontology
 [right arrow] AGG AGG Aggregate
AGG Allgemeines Gleichbehandlungsgesetz
AGG African Gold Group, Inc.
AGG Arnall Golden Gregory LLP (Atlanta, GA)
AGG Aggravated
AGG Asociación de Gerentes de Guatemala
; Lys [right arrow] Arg) in all the 26 W14 group isolates in this study. Three isolates were resistant to INH. Sequence analysis of the katG gene in these isolates revealed that the one IN[H.sup.R]-W23 isolate had a genetic alteration at codon 315 (AGC AGC Automatic Gain Control
AGC Automotive Glass Cartridge (fuse)
AGC Associated General Contractors
AGC Associated General Contractors of America
AGC Atypical Glandular Cells
AGC Attorney-General's Chambers
 [right arrow] ACC See adaptive cruise control. ; Ser [right arrow] Thr), while the two IN[H.sup.R]-W14 isolates had the same single nucleotide insertion generating a frameshift mutation at codon 283 (CTG CTG Cartridge
CTG Center for Technology in Government (SUNY, Albany, New York)
CTG Center for Technology in Government
CTG Computer Task Group (IT consulting company; Buffalo, NY, USA) 
 [right arrow] ATG ATG antithymocyte globulin.
lymphocyte immune globulin (antithymocyte globulin equine, ATG, ATG equine, LIG)

Atgam

Pharmacologic class: Immunoglobulin

Therapeutic class: Immunosuppressant
), which results in a termination upstream at codon 310, previously unreported (Figure 4).

[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]

All 26 isolates in the W14 group were linked to the W family based on all the secondary typing methods used. All had katG codon 463 sequence (CTG; Leu Leu leucine.

Leu
abbr.
leucine



Leu

leucine.
) and gyrA codon 95 sequence (ACC; Thr), placing them in genetic group 1 in the broad evolutionary framework outlined by Sreevatsan et al. (20,21). IS6110 insertion site mapping showed that all 26 isolates had the A1 insertion in the origin of replication and a single IS6110 copy in the NTF chromosomal locus (20,25).

Demographic Features of the W14 Cases

For the 22 patients in the W14 group, the mean age was 40 (range: 1 to 83 yrs) (Table). All were US-born, and 17 (77%) were of non-Hispanic black origin. In patients for whom HIV serology Serology

The division of biological science concerned with antigen-antibody reactions in serum. It properly encompasses any of these reactions, but is often used in a limited sense to denote laboratory diagnostic tests, especially for syphilis.
 data were available, 74% (14 of 19) were HIV seropositive seropositive /se·ro·pos·i·tive/ (-poz´i-tiv) showing positive results on serological examination; showing a high level of antibody.

se·ro·pos·i·tive
adj.
. Including HIV serology, 84% (16 of 19) had at least one of the known risk factors for TB (i.e., HIV, history of incarceration Confinement in a jail or prison; imprisonment.

Police officers and other law enforcement officers are authorized by federal, state, and local lawmakers to arrest and confine persons suspected of crimes. The judicial system is authorized to confine persons convicted of crimes.
, homelessness, alcohol abuse, or intravenous drug use intravenous drug use Intravenous drug abuse The habitual IV injection of drugs of abuse Epidemiology In the US ± 2.5 million–population ± 235 million have used IVDs Infections Pyogenic–eg, endocarditis, pneumonia, sepsis Common agents ). A review of all drug-treatment regimen records of the W14 cases showed that only one patient had streptomycin as part of TB chemotherapy.

Investigation of 18 cases from NYC identified 107 contacts (mean of 6 contacts per case). Among contacts, 24% were PPD (1) (Parallel Presence Detect) The method used by earlier SIMM memory modules to communicate their capacity to the computer. A binary number coming from a parallel set of pins was read by the system, with each pin representing one bit. Contrast with SPD.  (purified protein derivative purified protein derivative

see purified protein derivative of tuberculin.
) positive. Investigations conducted by the NYC TB Control Program did not link any patients in this cohort or identify any new contacts with active disease.

Discussion

In this study the combination of multiple and independent molecular typing techniques permitted the identification and sub-grouping of a distinct branch of the W phylogenetic lineage, the W14 group. Twenty isolates with an identical IS6110 pattern (W14) and an additional six (three W23 and three W26) isolates with closely related IS6110 fingerprint patterns were identified in a fingerprint archive of > 13,000 isolates. The W14 group was first typed to the "W" family fingerprint database of 1,498 isolates and then later subgrouped as a distinct branch of the W family. Five independent molecular techniques were used to confirm the distinctiveness of W14 isolates. The IS6110 fingerprint pattern had two distinct motifs, unique within the PHRI database (Figure 1A). In addition, VNTR, PGRS, and spoligotyping patterns distinguished the W14 group from all other isolates analyzed by these methods in our collection, which includes > 1,000 VNTR results, 600 PGRS images, and > 2,500 spoligotype samples (Figure 1-3).

All isolates in the W14 group were resistant to high levels of streptomycin (> [micro]500 g/mL), 20 were mono-streptomycin resistant, and the remaining 6 isolates were polyresistant. Sequencing analysis confirmed that all isolates shared the same mutation in the rpsL gene in codon 43, a mutation previously associated with high levels of streptomycin resistance (MIC > 500; (39). The genetic alteration that directs the change of lysine lysine (lī`sēn), organic compound, one of the 20 amino acids commonly found in animal proteins. Only the l-stereoisomer appears in mammalian protein.  to threonine threonine (thrē`ənēn), organic compound, one of the 22 α-amino acids commonly found in animal proteins. Only the l-stereoisomer appears in mammalian protein.  in codon 43 of the rpsL gene is one of the two most frequently reported mutations associated with streptomycin resistance: Together, they account for approximately 53% of streptomycin-resistant cases (40). Hence, this observation alone would not be sufficient to determine clonal relatedness. However, in combination with the molecular grouping, the data strongly suggest that these strains are clonal and are the progeny of a single streptomycin-resistant predecessor.

Treatment records showed that only one patient received two months of streptomycin in combination with INH and rifampin. This regimen was changed when susceptibility data were available. The absence of streptomycin exposure in the patients with the W14 group of isolates further supports the thesis that each of these patients was infected with a streptomycin-resistant isolate rather than acquiring resistance while on therapy.

There were 295 streptomycin mono-resistant isolates from 295 patients reported in NYC during 1993 and 1995 to 1999; 49% of these were from foreign-born patients. Of the 150 U.S.-born patients with mono-streptomycin resistant TB reported in NYC during the same period, 83 isolates were genotyped (55%); 31% (n+26) belonged to the W14 group. Genotyping data of 187 mono-streptomycin-resistant clinical isolates, including the 83 from NYC, identified the W14 group as the only epidemiologically important cluster of patients. Six additional, unrelated clusters of two cases each were identified in the PHRI fingerprint database. From the PHRI archive, no streptomycin-susceptible isolates with the W14 molecular characteristics have been identified to date from NYC or other locations (samples fingerprinted: n= > 12,000; NYC: n= > 6,000). Taken together, the molecular data point to the acquisition of streptomycin resistance before dissemination of this strain into the community.

Several strains have continued to acquire additional secondary drug resistances (Figure 4), including INH, ETH eth  
n.
Variant of edh.
, PZA, and EMB EMB

eosin-methylene blue.
 (W14: 1 ST[R.sup.R] IN[H.sup.R], 1 ST[R.sup.R] IN[H.sup.R] EM[B.sup.R], 2 ST[R.sup.R] ET[H.sup.R], 1 ST[R.sup.R] PZ[A.sup.R] ET[H.sup.R]; W23: 1 ST[R.sup.R] IN[H.sup.R]). None of the isolates examined acquired resistance to rifampin. In a previous study, we elucidated a plausible pathway for the evolution of the W-MDR strain in NYC (Windex strain) in the early 1990s (17). In that study, the emergence and spread of the W-MDR strain in NYC was believed to have started by acquisition of streptomycin resistance, followed by INH and rifampin resistance, but the outbreak did not occur until the MDR-genotype was developed. In contrast, the W14 group of isolates spread after streptomycin resistance was acquired; subsequently, additional resistance developed, creating a group of poly-resistant variants. Sequencing data in combination with IS6110 Southern blot hybridization were used to demonstrate that INH resistance had developed on two occasions independently, once in W14 and once in a W23 (Figure 4) isolate. The W23 katG substitution on codon 315 is found on the same codon as in the WMDR WMDR World's Most Dangerous Road (La Paz, Bolivia)  index strain but involves a different nucleotide. DNA sequence DNA sequence Genetics The precise order of bases–A,T,G,C–in a segment of DNA, gene, chromosome, or an entire genome. See Base pair, Base sequence analysis, Chromosome, Gene, Genome.  analysis of different resistance target genes provides molecular markers to speculate the stepwise stepwise

incremental; additional information is added at each step.


stepwise multiple regression
used when a large number of possible explanatory variables are available and there is difficulty interpreting the partial regression
 building of polyresistant strains.

Since the late 1980s, molecular methods have been gradually integrated into the study of TB epidemiology and control. In addition to augmenting conventional epidemiologic investigations, molecular typing has been used to identify previously unrecognized point-source cases and in two reports was used to confirm transmission in a social setting (41,42). More recently, molecular typing with surveillance data uncovered an epidemiologically significant strain cluster (n=43), the W4 group, from New Jersey, that has no apparent common point source or patient links (19). The concordance concordance /con·cor·dance/ (-kord´ins) in genetics, the occurrence of a given trait in both members of a twin pair.concor´dant

con·cor·dance
n.
 of demographic and geographic data with molecular methods and the lack of concrete links in the W4 cases suggest a combination of reactivation reactivation

to become active after a period of quiescence or, as in bacterial and viral infections, latency.


cross reactivation
 and recent transmission. Likewise in this study, despite the demographic, geographic and molecular grouping, we could not establish any patient linkage in the W14 group. Nonetheless, the extent and validity of the molecular data demonstrated that these 22 patients were infected with either the same strain (16 W14 cases) or one of two closely related isolates (3 W23 or 3 W26).

This study has a number of limitations. PHRI's collection from NYC reflects a convenience sample that is approximately 44% of the total number of culture-positive TB cases reported to the NYC TB Control Program in 1992 to 1999. Of the W14 group patients, all were U.S.-born, > 70% were HIV positive, and most (73%) were 25 to 50 years of age at diagnosis. Despite the demographic homogeneity in these patients, no epidemiologic links were established. Furthermore, the limited sampling suggests an actual denominator of W14 group cases larger than reported in this study, which aids in explaining the inability to establish epidemiologic links in the patients. Patient interviews were initially conducted as part of routine contact investigation; patients were not reinterviewed once molecular cluster information was available. Therefore, in-depth investigation of cases that appeared from molecular and surveillance data to be related was not available, which limits the inferences we can make on the observed lack of epidemiologic links.

Given the lack of overt epidemiologic links indicative of recent transmission between cases, the possibility that the W14 strain group is endemic to the region should be considered. However, the streptomycin monoresistance suggests that this strain must have spread after the introduction and application of this drug for TB treatment in 1944. It is surprising that not a single susceptible, related strain has been identified in the region even following extensive molecular analysis of other W variants. If the W14 or its predecessor were endemic, only the streptomycin-resistant variant has managed to spread, again suggesting that this dissemination depended on a single event, and yet, contact investigation has failed to establish a link. We speculate that the W14 cluster with the large young HIV- seropositive population is likely the result of recent transmission; however, the lack of patient-to-patient links suggests a subgroup of cases caused by an endemic strain that developed in NYC sometime after streptomycin was introduced in 1944.

By using multiple independent molecular markers, we made inferences on the strains' recent evolution. This study highlights the importance of tracking all types of drug-resistant strains to prevent the sequential development of multidrug-resistant strains. The utility that these methods lend to TB control will rely on the efficiency of integrating both surveillance and contact-tracing information with the molecular data in a proactive manner for more well-informed TB investigations.
Table. Demographic characteristics of patients in W14 group (a)

    Characteristics N=22 (%)

Gender
  Male                   13 (59)
  Female                  9 (49)
Race
  Non-Hispanic black     17 (77)
  Hispanic white          4 (18)
  Asian                   1 (5)
Age at diagnosis
  Median age (range)    38 (1-83)
  25-50 years            16 (73)
HIV serology
  Seropositive           14 (64)
  Seronegative            5 (23)
  Unknown                 3 (13)
Country of birth
  US born               22 (100)
  Foreign born            0 (0)
Risk factors
  IVDU (b)               7 (32)
  Alcoholic              9 (41)
  Incarceration           2 (9)
  Homelessness            2 (9)
Year of case report
  1992                    2 (9)
  1993                    7 (32)
  1994                    4 (18)
  1995                    1 (4)
  1996                    3 (14)
  1997                    3 (14)
  1998                    0 (0)
  1999                    2 (9)

(a)All data are presented as number (percentage) except median age.

(b) IVDU = intravenous drug use.


Acknowledgments

We thank H. Marasco, A. Ravikovitch, and W. Eisner for assistance with patient and fingerprint databases. We thank Visible Genetics for providing us with the Clipper Sequencer See MIDI sequencer.

(music) sequencer - Any system for recording and/or playback of music via a programmable memory which stores music not as audio data, but as some representation of notes.
 and sequencing kits on a trial basis.

This research was supported in part by CDC's National Tuberculosis Genotyping and Surveillance Network Cooperative Agreement. This is publication 75 from the Public Health Research Institute, Tuberculosis Center.

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Pablo Bifani, * ([dagger]) Barun Mathema, * Martha Campo, * Soraya Moghazeh, * Beth Nivin, ([double dagger]) Elena Shashkina, * Jeffrey Driscoll, ([section]) Sonal S. Munsiff, ([double dagger]) Richard Frothingham, ([paragraph]) and Barry N. Kreiswirth *

* Public Health Research Institute Tuberculosis Center, New York, NY, USA; ([dagger]) New York University New York University, mainly in New York City; coeducational; chartered 1831, opened 1832 as the Univ. of the City of New York, renamed 1896. It comprises 13 schools and colleges, maintaining 4 main centers (including the Medical Center) in the city, as well as the  School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA; ([double dagger]) New York City Department of Health, New York, New York, USA; ([section]) New York State Department of Health, Albany, New York For other uses, see Albany.
Albany is the capital of the State of New York and the county seat of Albany County. Albany lies 136 miles (219 km) north of New York City, and slightly to the south of the juncture of the Mohawk and Hudson Rivers.
, USA; ([paragraph]) Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina Durham is a city in the U.S. state of North Carolina. It is the county seat of Durham CountyGR6 and is the fourth-largest city in the state by population.

Dr. Bifani was a graduate student in the Public Health Research Institute Tuberculosis Center in New York City at the time this article was written. The center was established in January 1992 in response to the reemergence of TB in New York. He is currently at the Institut Pasteur de Lille France working as a postdoctoral fellow.

* Address for correspondence: Barry N. Kreiswirth, Public Health Research Institute Tuberculosis Center, New York, New York 10016; USA; fax: 212-578-0853; e-mail: barry@phri.org
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