By any measure,
tuberculosis1 (TB) is a wildly successful pathogen. It infects as many as two billion people in every corner of the world, with a new infection of a human host estimated to occur every second. Now, thanks to a new analysis of dozens of tuberculosis genomes gathered from around the world, scientists are getting a more
detailed2 picture of why TB is so
prevalent(普遍的) and how it evolves to resist countermeasures. Writing today (Aug. 21, 2013) in the journal Public Library of Science (PLoS) Pathogens, a team led by University of Wisconsin-Madison researcher Caitlin Pepperell describes a
bacterium3 that marches in
lockstep(因循守旧,步伐一致) with human population growth and history, evolving to take advantage of the most crowded and wretched human conditions.
"It's as though the bacterium places bets on human behavior," says Pepperell,
formerly4 of Stanford University, and now a professor of medicine and medical microbiology at UW-Madison. "It always bets that humans will go to war, send people to refugee camps, and gather in
miserable5 places. Historically, that's been a winning bet on the bacterium's part."
The PLoS Pathogens study, whose senior author is Marcus Feldman of Stanford, reveals that tuberculosis experienced a 25-fold expansion worldwide in the 17th century, a time when human populations underwent explosive growth and European exploration of Africa, the Americas, Asia and Oceania was at its peak.
"The
timing6 is coincident with expansion, urbanization and colonial
migrations7 of global human populations," Pepperell explains. "These findings suggest that much of the current TB pandemic has its origins in historical events of the last three centuries."
TB is only transmitted by people, and the organism cannot survive in the environment. It thrives, however, in the crowded conditions of prisons, refugee camps and slums, and TB populations tend to be dominated by the bacteria "lucky" enough to land in those environments.
The analysis conducted by Pepperell and her colleagues focused on the role of natural selection, looking at patterns of
genetic8 diversity among 63 TB and related pathogenic mycobacterial genomes gathered from around the globe.
The study shows a highly
constrained10 bacterial9 genome, with most deleterious mutations quickly discarded. This was especially true for
genes11 essential for causing disease, protein translation and the trafficking and
metabolism12 of
inorganic13 ions, which help control the interaction between the TB pathogen and its human host.
The bacterium's "
defense14" genes, on the other hand, showed a high degree of
tolerance15 for beneficial mutations, which may play a role in evolution of drug resistance and
evasion16 of the human immune system.
Pepperell notes: "
Evolutionary17 theory predicts that Mycobacterium tuberculosis populations should be vulnerable to
extinction18. Yet it is obviously highly prevalent. It must have some incredibly clever strategies and tricks to hang on."
As a result, the explosive spread of TB parallels the growth of human populations and takes every advantage of a world where most people live in crowded and
impoverished19 conditions.
The study, according to Pepperell, should help other researchers home in on genes that may be good candidates for targeting with new drugs, and aid disease control strategies that accommodate or even co-opt the bacterium's evolution and help drive its extinction.
In addition to Pepperell and Feldman, co-authors of the new study include Amanda Casto, Julie Granka and Omar Cornejo of Stanford; Andrew Kitchen of the University of Iowa; Eddie Holmes of the University of Sydney; and Bruce Birren and James Galagan of the Broad Institute.