Genetic Diversity of Campylobacter concisus Isolates from Slovenian Patients with Infectious Diarrhoea
Romina Kofol, Mateja Pirs, Tadeja Kotar, Tatjana Lejko Zupanc, Andraž Celar Šturm, Andreja Kukec, Tadeja Matos, Tina Triglav

TL;DR
This study explores the genetic diversity of Campylobacter concisus in Slovenian patients, revealing distinct genomic features and virulence factors.
Contribution
The study identifies novel sequence types and distinct genomic characteristics between two genomospecies of C. concisus.
Findings
GS1 isolates have smaller genomes, lower GC content, and fewer coding regions compared to GS2 isolates.
Plasmids like pSma1 and pICON are more common in GS2 isolates.
Zot and Exo9 toxins are present in both genomospecies, with Zot in GS1 and Exo9 in GS2.
Abstract
Campylobacter concisus is recognized as a potential pathogen in gastrointestinal diseases, particularly in patients with chronic intestinal diseases. This study investigates the genomic characteristics, phylogenetic distribution, virulence factors, resistance genes and presence of plasmids in C. concisus isolates from Slovenian patients with community-acquired infectious diarrhoea. Prospectively collected isolates were analysed using whole-genome sequencing (WGS). WGS analysis revealed substantial genetic diversity among isolates, with distinct differences observed between two genomospecies (GS1, GS2). GS1 isolates had smaller genomes, lower GC content, and fewer coding regions than GS2 isolates. Multilocus sequence typing confirmed a high degree of genetic diversity, with most isolates belonging to novel sequence types. Plasmids, including pSma1 and pICON, were more prevalent in GS2…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSalmonella and Campylobacter epidemiology · Veterinary medicine and infectious diseases · Probiotics and Fermented Foods
