A Bacillus anthracis Genome Sequence from the Sverdlovsk 1979 Autopsy Specimens.
Jason W SahlTalima PearsonRichard OkinakaJames M SchuppJohn D GilleceHannah HeatonDawn BirdsellCrystal HeppViacheslav FofanovRamón NosedaAntonio FasanellaAlex HoffmasterDavid M WagnerPaul S KeimPublished in: mBio (2016)
The 1979 Russian anthrax outbreak resulted from an industrial accident at the Soviet anthrax spore production facility in the city of Sverdlovsk. Deep genomic sequencing of two autopsy specimens generated a draft genome and phylogenetic placement of the Soviet Sverdlovsk anthrax strain. While it is known that Soviet scientists had genetically manipulated Bacillus anthracis with the potential to evade vaccine prophylaxis and antibiotic therapeutics, there was no genomic evidence of this from the Sverdlovsk production strain genome. The whole-genome SNP genotype of the Sverdlovsk strain was used to precisely identify it and its close relatives in the context of an extensive global B. anthracis strain collection. This genomic identity can now be used for forensic tracking of this weapons material on a global scale and for future anthrax investigations.