Diversity and epidemiological profile of Pseudomonas aeruginosa from drinking water in Brazil genotyped using multi-locus sequence typing.
Paula Vasconcelos CostaJanaína Dos Santos NascimentoStephen James ForsytheMarcelo Luiz Lima BrandãoPublished in: Letters in applied microbiology (2023)
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a Gram-negative bacillus associated with waterborne diseases. The objective of this study was to determine whether particular P. aeruginosa sequence types (STs) were associated with drinking water contamination in Brazil. This was achieved by searching the Pseudomonas PubMLST database which contains the records for 8358 strains collected between 1938-2023. The majority (97.2%) had the complete 7-loci multilocus sequence typing profile and were assigned to 3,486 STs. After eBURST (an algorithm used to infer patterns of evolutionary descent among clusters), 1,219 groups with single-locus variant and 575 groups with double-locus variant were formed. Brazil was the South American country with the most isolates (n=219, 58.24%), and the Simpson`s index was 0.9392. Of the 219 Brazilian isolates, eight were isolated in water and identified as STs 252, 1417, 1605, 2502, 2620, 3078 and 3312. ST252, 1417 and 3078 have already been isolated from clinical cases worldwide. Furthermore, ST1605 and 2620, after the eBURST, they were grouped in the same clonal complex as STs involved in human infections. In conclusion, P. aeruginosa STs involved in human infections were found in bottled drinking water commercialized in Brazil, revealing that these types of drinking waters can be a vehicle of contamination.
Keyphrases
- drinking water
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- health risk
- health risk assessment
- gram negative
- endothelial cells
- multidrug resistant
- genome wide association study
- genetic diversity
- biofilm formation
- cystic fibrosis
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- acinetobacter baumannii
- amino acid
- risk assessment
- adverse drug
- heavy metals
- alcohol consumption