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ABSTRACT: Importance
We analyzed the genomic diversity of Staphylococcus aureus, a globally prevalent bacterial species that causes serious infections in humans. Our goal was to build a genetic picture of the different strains of S. aureus and which genes may be associated with them. We reprocessed >84,000 genomes and subsampled to remove redundancy. We found that individual samples sharing >99.5% of their genome could be grouped into strains. We also showed that a portion of genes that are present in intermediate frequency in the species are strongly associated with some strains but completely absent from others, suggesting a role in strain specificity. This work lays the foundation for understanding individual gene histories of the S. aureus species and also outlines strategies for processing large bacterial genomic data sets.
SUBMITTER: Raghuram V
PROVIDER: S-EPMC11265343 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Jul
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
mSystems 20240627 7
<i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> causes both hospital- and community-acquired infections in humans worldwide. Due to the high incidence of infection, <i>S. aureus</i> is also one of the most sampled and sequenced pathogens today, providing an outstanding resource to understand variation at the bacterial subspecies level. We processed and downsampled 83,383 public <i>S. aureus</i> Illumina whole-genome shotgun sequences and 1,263 complete genomes to produce 7,954 representative substrains. Pairwise c ...[more]