Life (Nov 2023)

<i>Listeria monocytogenes</i> ST37 Distribution in the Moscow Region and Properties of Clinical and Foodborne Isolates

  • Olga L. Voronina,
  • Marina S. Kunda,
  • Natalia N. Ryzhova,
  • Ekaterina I. Aksenova,
  • Margarita A. Kustova,
  • Tatiana I. Karpova,
  • Alina R. Melkumyan,
  • Elena A. Klimova,
  • Olga A. Gruzdeva,
  • Igor S. Tartakovsky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/life13112167
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. 2167

Abstract

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Listerias of the phylogenetic lineage II (PLII) are common in the European environment and are hypovirulent. Despite this, they caused more than a third of the sporadic cases of listeriosis and multi-country foodborne outbreaks. L. monocytogenes ST37 is one of them. During the COVID-19 pandemic, ST37 appeared in clinical cases and ranked second in occurrence among food isolates in the Moscow region. The aim of this study was to describe the genomic features of ST37 isolates from different sources. All clinical cases of ST37 were in the cohort of male patients (age, 48–81 years) with meningitis–septicemia manifestation and COVID-19 or Influenza in the anamnesis. The core genomes of the fish isolates were closely related. The clinical and meat isolates revealed a large diversity. Prophages (2–4/genome) were the source of the unique genes. Two clinical isolates displayed pseudolysogeny, and excided prophages were A006-like. In the absence of plasmids, the assortment of virulence factors and resistance determinants in the chromosome corresponded to the hypovirulent characteristics. However, all clinical isolates caused severe disease, with deaths in four cases. Thus, these studies allow us to speculate that a previous viral infection increases human susceptibility to listeriosis.

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