RT Journal Article SR Electronic(1) A1 Lemée, Ludovic A1 Bourgeois, Ingrid A1 Ruffin, Elodie A1 Collignon, Anne A1 Lemeland, Jean-François A1 Pons, Jean-LouisYR 2005 T1 Multilocus sequence analysis and comparative evolution of virulence-associated genes and housekeeping genes of Clostridium difficile JF Microbiology, VO 151 IS 10 SP 3171 OP 3180 DO https://doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.28155-0 PB Microbiology Society, SN 1465-2080, AB A multilocus sequence analysis of ten virulence-associated genes was performed to study the genetic relationships between 29 Clostridium difficile isolates of various origins, hosts and clinical presentations, and selected from the main lineages previously defined by multilocus sequence typing (MLST) of housekeeping genes. Colonization-factor-encoding genes (cwp66, cwp84, fbp68, fliC, fliD, groEL and slpA), toxin A and B genes (tcdA and tcdB), and the toxin A and B positive regulator gene (tcdD) were investigated. Binary toxin genes (cdtA and cdtB) were also detected, and internal fragments were sequenced for positive isolates. Virulence-associated genes exhibited a moderate polymorphism, comparable to the polymorphism of housekeeping genes, whereas cwp66 and slpA genes appeared highly polymorphic. Isolates recovered from human pseudomembranous colitis cases did not define a specific lineage. The presence of binary toxin genes, detected in five of the 29 isolates (17 %), was also not linked to clinical presentation. Conversely, toxigenic A−B+ isolates defined a very homogeneous lineage, which is distantly related to other isolates. By clustering analysis, animal isolates were intermixed with human isolates. Multilocus sequence analysis of virulence-associated genes is consistent with a clonal population structure for C. difficile and with the lack of host specificity. The data suggest a co-evolution of several of the virulence-associated genes studied (including toxins A and B and the binary toxin genes) with housekeeping genes, reflecting the genetic background of C. difficile, whereas flagellin, cwp66 and slpA genes may undergo recombination events and/or environmental selective pressure., UL https://www.microbiologyresearch.org/content/journal/micro/10.1099/mic.0.28155-0