학술논문
Distinct SalmonellaEnteritidis lineages associated with enterocolitis in high-income settings and invasive disease in low-income settings
Document Type
Article
Author
Feasey, Nicholas A; Hadfield, James; Keddy, Karen H; Dallman, Timothy J; Jacobs, Jan; Deng, Xiangyu; Wigley, Paul; Barquist, Lars; Langridge, Gemma C; Feltwell, Theresa; Harris, Simon R; Mather, Alison E; Fookes, Maria; Aslett, Martin; Msefula, Chisomo; Kariuki, Samuel; Maclennan, Calman A; Onsare, Robert S; Weill, François-Xavier; Le Hello, Simon; Smith, Anthony M; McClelland, Michael; Desai, Prerak; Parry, Christopher M; Cheesbrough, John; French, Neil; Campos, Josefina; Chabalgoity, Jose A; Betancor, Laura; Hopkins, Katie L; Nair, Satheesh; Humphrey, Tom J; Lunguya, Octavie; Cogan, Tristan A; Tapia, Milagritos D; Sow, Samba O; Tennant, Sharon M; Bornstein, Kristin; Levine, Myron M; Lacharme-Lora, Lizeth; Everett, Dean B; Kingsley, Robert A; Parkhill, Julian; Heyderman, Robert S; Dougan, Gordon; Gordon, Melita A; Thomson, Nicholas R
Source
Nature Genetics; October 2016, Vol. 48 Issue: 10 p1211-1217, 7p
Subject
Language
ISSN
10614036; 15461718
Abstract
Nicholas Feasey and colleagues report whole-genome sequence analysis of 675 isolates of Salmonella entericaserovar Enteritidis from 45 countries. They find evidence for a global epidemic clade associated with enterocolitis and two novel clades restricted to distinct regions of Africa and associated with invasive disease.