Publication details

Majority of Treponema pallidum ssp. pallidum MLST allelic profiles in the Czech Republic (2004–2022) belong to two SS14-like clusters

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Authors

VRBOVÁ Eliška POSPÍŠILOVÁ Petra DASTYCHOVÁ Eliška KOJANOVA Martina KREIDLOVA Miluse ROB Filip VAŠKŮ Vladimír MOSIO Petra STRNADEL Radim FAUSTMANNOVA Olga KUKLOVA Ivana DVOŘÁKOVÁ HEROLDOVÁ Monika ZAKOUCKA Hana ŠMAJS David

Year of publication 2024
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Scientific Reports
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Web https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-024-68656-5
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-68656-5
Keywords Treponema pallidum ssp. pallidum
Attached files
Description Syphilis is a multistage sexually transmitted disease caused by Treponema pallidum ssp. pallidum. In the Czech Republic, there are around 700-800 new syphilis cases annually, continuously increasing since 2012. This study analyzed a total of 1228 samples from 2004 to 2022. Of the PCR-positive typeable samples (n = 415), 68.7% were fully-typed (FT), and 31.3% were partially-typed. Most of the identified isolates belonged to the SS14-clade and only 6.3% were the Nichols-like cluster. While in the beginning of sample collection isolates have been macrolide-susceptible, recent isolates are completely resistant to macrolides. Among the FT samples, 34 different allelic profiles (APs) were found. Most of the profiles (n = 27) appeared just once in the Czech population, while seven profiles were detected more than twice. The most frequent APs belonged to two separate groups of SS14-like isolates, including group of 1.3.1 (ST 1) and 1.26.1 (ST 25) profiles, and the second group containing 1.1.8 (ST 3), 1.1.1 (ST 2), and 1.1.3 (ST 11) (representing 57.5%, and 25.3% of all detected APs, respectively). Both groups consistently differed in 6 nucleotide positions in five genes (TP0150, TP0324, TP0515, TP0548, and TP0691) coding amino-acid replacements suggesting that one or more of these differences could be involved in the higher success of the first group.
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