Login / Signup

Apparent nosocomial adaptation of Enterococcus faecalis predates the modern hospital era.

Anna Kaarina PöntinenJanetta TopSergio Arredondo-AlonsoGerry Tonkin-HillAna R FreitasCarla NovaisRebecca A GladstoneMaiju E PesonenRodrigo MenesesHenri PesonenJohn A LeesDorota JamrozyStephen D BentleyVal F LanzaCarmen TorresLuisa PeixeTeresa M CoqueJulian ParkhillAnita C SchürchRob J L WillemsJukka Corander
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
Enterococcus faecalis is a commensal and nosocomial pathogen, which is also ubiquitous in animals and insects, representing a classical generalist microorganism. Here, we study E. faecalis isolates ranging from the pre-antibiotic era in 1936 up to 2018, covering a large set of host species including wild birds, mammals, healthy humans, and hospitalised patients. We sequence the bacterial genomes using short- and long-read techniques, and identify multiple extant hospital-associated lineages, with last common ancestors dating back as far as the 19th century. We find a population cohesively connected through homologous recombination, a metabolic flexibility despite a small genome size, and a stable large core genome. Our findings indicate that the apparent hospital adaptations found in hospital-associated E. faecalis lineages likely predate the "modern hospital" era, suggesting selection in another niche, and underlining the generalist nature of this nosocomial pathogen.
Keyphrases