Comparative study of genotypes of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from a Northern Indian setting with strains reported from other parts of India and neighboring countries

2017 
This study was carried out to characterize Mycobacterium tuberculosis population in Ghatampur, Kanpur, North India, by spoligotyping and Mycobacterial Interspersed Repetitive Units-Variable Number of Tandem Repeats (MIRU-VNTRs) typing. A total of 335 isolates were genotyped by spoligotyping and Central Asian (CAS) sub-lineage was the most prevalent, comprising 59.1% of all isolates. Other lineages were: East-African Indian (EAI) (19.10%), T (5.07%), Beijing (3.28%), Manu (2.98%), X (2.68%), S (0.89%), H3 (0.59%), Ural (0.59%), LAM 9 (0.29%) and unknown (5.37%). This data was compared with 8444 clinical isolates from other parts of India and neighboring countries. Thanks to interrogation of the SITVIT2 database, which shows that China is unique in having a predominance of Beijing lineage; Iran in having an almost equal proportion of Ural and CAS lineages; while the rest of the Middle-East and Indian subcontinent shows a gradient of CAS lineage predominating in the north of tropic of cancer, and the ancestral EAI lineage in South India and South-East Asia. Additionally, 12 loci MIRU-VNTR typing efficiently discriminated 13 spoligotype-defined clusters into 92 patterns; 53 isolates showed >70% homology. It was observed that Beijing lineage strains were more frequently associated with MDR strains (p-value = 0.001). A multi-step application of combination of spoligotyping and MIRU-VNTR typing for analyzing the molecular epidemiology of TB may provide a better means of fingerprinting and studying transmission dynamics.
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