Scientific Reports (Jul 2024)

Majority of Treponema pallidum ssp. pallidum MLST allelic profiles in the Czech Republic (2004–2022) belong to two SS14-like clusters

  • Eliška Vrbová,
  • Petra Pospíšilová,
  • Eliška Dastychová,
  • Martina Kojanová,
  • Miluše Kreidlová,
  • Filip Rob,
  • Vladimír Vašků,
  • Petra Mosio,
  • Radim Strnadel,
  • Olga Faustmannová,
  • Ivana Kuklová,
  • Monika Dvořáková Heroldová,
  • Hana Zákoucká,
  • David Šmajs

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-68656-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Syphilis is a multistage sexually transmitted disease caused by Treponema pallidum ssp. pallidum. In the Czech Republic, there are around 700–800 new syphilis cases annually, continuously increasing since 2012. This study analyzed a total of 1228 samples from 2004 to 2022. Of the PCR-positive typeable samples (n = 415), 68.7% were fully-typed (FT), and 31.3% were partially-typed. Most of the identified isolates belonged to the SS14-clade and only 6.3% were the Nichols-like cluster. While in the beginning of sample collection isolates have been macrolide-susceptible, recent isolates are completely resistant to macrolides. Among the FT samples, 34 different allelic profiles (APs) were found. Most of the profiles (n = 27) appeared just once in the Czech population, while seven profiles were detected more than twice. The most frequent APs belonged to two separate groups of SS14-like isolates, including group of 1.3.1 (ST 1) and 1.26.1 (ST 25) profiles, and the second group containing 1.1.8 (ST 3), 1.1.1 (ST 2), and 1.1.3 (ST 11) (representing 57.5%, and 25.3% of all detected APs, respectively). Both groups consistently differed in 6 nucleotide positions in five genes (TP0150, TP0324, TP0515, TP0548, and TP0691) coding amino-acid replacements suggesting that one or more of these differences could be involved in the higher success of the first group.