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Title: | Genetic Diversity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Complex in Jos, Nigeria |
Authors: | Ani, Agatha Bruvik, Torbjorn Okoh, Yetunde Agaba, Patricia Agbaji, Oche Idoko, John Dahle, Ulf .A |
Issue Date: | 2010 |
Series/Report no.: | Vol.10;No:189;Pp 1-5 |
Abstract: | Background: Nigeria has a high tuberculosis incidence, and genotyping studies of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Complex (MTC) in the country are necessary in order to improve our understanding of the epidemic.
Methods: Isolates of MTC were isolated from cases of pulmonary tuberculosis in Jos, North Central region of Nigeria
during 2006-2008. Drug susceptibility test (DST) was performed on 77 of 111 isolates by proportion method on
Lowenstein Jensen (LJ) slope while genotyping of mycobacterial DNA was performed by spoligotyping. The SpolDB4
database and the model-based program 'spotclust' were used to assign isolates to families, subfamilies and variants.
Results: A total of 111 pulmonary isolates from consecutive tuberculosis patients in the city of Jos, Plateau State,
Nigeria were spoligotyped. A total of 84 (76%) of the isolates belonged to the Latin American Mediterranean (LAM)
family. Of these, 78 isolates were assigned to the LAM10 lineage. Among these, 66 exhibited identical spoligopatterns.
Drug susceptibility profiles obtained were not consistently associated with any spoligopattern.
Conclusions: The dominance of few M. tuberculosis lineages suggests either a high rate of transmission, frequent
import of closely related strains, or a highly conserved genotype. It remains to be confirmed whether the
predominance of identical LAM10 represent an outbreak.
Spoligotyping was useful to gain an overall understanding of the local TB epidemic. This study demonstrated that the
incidence of TB in Jos, Nigeria may be caused by a few successful M. tuberculosis families, dominated by the LAM10
family. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/504 |
Appears in Collections: | Medicine
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