| 25 Mars 2013
 Drug-resistant bacterial infections pose a significant challenge to  public health and may have severe and sometimes fatal consequences. As  the costs of whole genome sequencing methods continue to plummet and the  speed of analysis increases, it becomes increasingly attractive for  scientists to use whole genome sequencing to answer disease-related  questions. “We used whole genome sequencing to see if we could determine if the  two disease outbreaks were caused by the same bacterium and to  investigate if the pathogens were transmitted from animal to humans or  the other way around,” remarked Mark Holmes, from the University of  Cambridge and the senior author on the paper. “At first glance, it seems  reasonable to expect the same pathogen to be the source of the two  outbreaks at the two geographically close locations. By looking at the  single differences in nucleotides or SNPs in the DNA sequences of each  isolate, it became obvious that two different strains of bacteria were  responsible for the two disease outbreaks. In one case, the results also  clearly showed that the most likely direction of transmission was from  animal to human.” Methicillin-resistant S. aureus can  lead to debilitating skin and soft tissue infections, bacteremia,  pneumonia and endocarditis. The researchers used an Illumina HiSeq  sequencing system to take a close look at the nucleotide sequence of  each pathogen. By comparing single difference in nucleotides in the two  sequences (single nucleotide polymorphisms) they were able to reach  conclusions about the identity of the pathogens and the routes of  infection. The researchers emphasize that while whole genome sequencing cannot  replace other more traditional types of diseases analysis it can greatly  increase the ability of scientists to distinguish between different  pathogens as the cause of disease. “Our findings demonstrate that the MRSA strains we studied are capable  of transmission between animals and humans, which highlights the role of  livestock as a potential reservoir of antibiotic-resistant bacteria,”  remarked Ewan Harrison, one of the lead authors of the study. Whole genome sequencing identifies zoonotic transmission of MRSA isolates with the novel mecA homologue mecC Ewan M. Harrison, Gavin K. Paterson, Matthew T.G. Holden, Jesper  Larsen, Marc Stegger, Anders Rhod Larsen, Andreas Petersen, Robert L.  Skov, Judit Marta Christensen, Anne Bak Zeuthen, Ole Heltberg, Simon R.  Harris, Ruth N. Zadoks, Julian Parkhill, Sharon J. Peacock, Mark A.  Holmes Read the paper: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/emmm.201202413/full doi: 10.1002/emmm.201202413 HEIDELBERG, 25 March 2013 – Researchers  have used whole genome sequencing to reveal if drug-resistant bacteria  are transmitted from animals to humans in two disease outbreaks that  occurred on different farms in Denmark. The results, which are published  today in EMBO Molecular Medicine, confirm animal-to-human transmission of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), a disease-causing bacterium that carries the recently described mecC gene. The mecC gene is responsible for resistance to the penicillin-like antibiotic methicillin.
HEIDELBERG, 25 March 2013 – Researchers  have used whole genome sequencing to reveal if drug-resistant bacteria  are transmitted from animals to humans in two disease outbreaks that  occurred on different farms in Denmark. The results, which are published  today in EMBO Molecular Medicine, confirm animal-to-human transmission of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), a disease-causing bacterium that carries the recently described mecC gene. The mecC gene is responsible for resistance to the penicillin-like antibiotic methicillin.