TY - JOUR
T1 - Progressive evolution of Streptococcus equi from Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus and adaption to equine hosts
AU - Wilson, Hayley J
AU - Dong, Jiangbao
AU - van Tonder, Andries J
AU - Ruis, Christopher
AU - Lefrancq, Noémie
AU - McGlennon, Abigail
AU - Bustos, Carla
AU - Frosth, Sara
AU - Léon, Albertine
AU - Blanchard, Adam M
AU - Holden, Matthew
AU - Waller, Andrew S
AU - Parkhill, Julian
N1 - Funding: This project and work performed by H.J.W. was funded by the PetPlan Charitable Trust (S19-741-780). J.D. is funded by Shandong Provincial Modern
Agricultural Industry Technology System (SDAIT-27-05), the Agricultural Seed Projects of Key Research and Development Plan of Shandong Province
(2023LZGCQY020), the Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province (ZR2020MC182) and Shandong Provincial Youth Innovation and Technology
Support Program (2019KJF018). N.L. is funded by the European Research Council (grant number 804744). Work undertaken by SES was kindly funded by the Horse Trust (G4017 and G2019).
PY - 2025/3/28
Y1 - 2025/3/28
N2 - Streptococcus equi subsp. equi causes the equine respiratory disease 'strangles', which is highly contagious, debilitating and costly to the equine industry. S. equi emerged from the ancestral Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus and continues to evolve and disseminate globally. Previous work has shown that there was a global population replacement around the beginning of the twentieth century, obscuring the early genetic events in this emergence. Here, we have used large-scale genomic analysis of S. equi and its ancestor S. zooepidemicus to identify evolutionary events, leading to the successful expansion of S. equi. One thousand two hundred one whole-genome sequences of S. equi were recovered from clinical samples or from data available in public databases. Seventy-four whole-genome sequences representative of the diversity of S. zooepidemicus were used to compare the gene content and examine the evolutionary emergence of S. equi. A dated Bayesian phylogeny was constructed, and ancestral state reconstruction was used to determine the order and timing of gene gain and loss events between the different species and between different S. equi lineages. Additionally, a newly developed framework was used to investigate the fitness of different S. equi lineages. We identified a novel S. equi lineage, comprising isolates from donkeys in Chinese farms, which diverged nearly 300 years ago, after the emergence of S. equi from S. zooepidemicus, but before the global sweep. Ancestral state reconstruction demonstrated that phage-encoded virulence factors slaA, seeL and seeM were acquired by the global S. equi after the divergence of the basal donkey lineage. We identified the equibactin locus in both S. equi populations, but not S. zooepidemicus, reinforcing its role as a key S. equi virulence mechanism involved in its initial emergence. Evidence of a further population sweep beginning in the early 2000s was detected in the UK. This clade now accounts for more than 80% of identified UK cases since 2016. Several sub-lineages demonstrated increased fitness, within which we identified the acquisition of a new, fifth prophage containing additional toxin genes. We definitively show that acquisition of the equibactin locus was a major determinant in S. equi becoming an equid-exclusive pathogen, but that other virulence factors were fixed by the population sweep at the beginning of the twentieth century. Evidence of a secondary population sweep in the UK and acquisition of further advantageous genes implies that S. equi is continuing to adapt, and therefore, continued investigations are required to determine further risks to the equine industry.
AB - Streptococcus equi subsp. equi causes the equine respiratory disease 'strangles', which is highly contagious, debilitating and costly to the equine industry. S. equi emerged from the ancestral Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus and continues to evolve and disseminate globally. Previous work has shown that there was a global population replacement around the beginning of the twentieth century, obscuring the early genetic events in this emergence. Here, we have used large-scale genomic analysis of S. equi and its ancestor S. zooepidemicus to identify evolutionary events, leading to the successful expansion of S. equi. One thousand two hundred one whole-genome sequences of S. equi were recovered from clinical samples or from data available in public databases. Seventy-four whole-genome sequences representative of the diversity of S. zooepidemicus were used to compare the gene content and examine the evolutionary emergence of S. equi. A dated Bayesian phylogeny was constructed, and ancestral state reconstruction was used to determine the order and timing of gene gain and loss events between the different species and between different S. equi lineages. Additionally, a newly developed framework was used to investigate the fitness of different S. equi lineages. We identified a novel S. equi lineage, comprising isolates from donkeys in Chinese farms, which diverged nearly 300 years ago, after the emergence of S. equi from S. zooepidemicus, but before the global sweep. Ancestral state reconstruction demonstrated that phage-encoded virulence factors slaA, seeL and seeM were acquired by the global S. equi after the divergence of the basal donkey lineage. We identified the equibactin locus in both S. equi populations, but not S. zooepidemicus, reinforcing its role as a key S. equi virulence mechanism involved in its initial emergence. Evidence of a further population sweep beginning in the early 2000s was detected in the UK. This clade now accounts for more than 80% of identified UK cases since 2016. Several sub-lineages demonstrated increased fitness, within which we identified the acquisition of a new, fifth prophage containing additional toxin genes. We definitively show that acquisition of the equibactin locus was a major determinant in S. equi becoming an equid-exclusive pathogen, but that other virulence factors were fixed by the population sweep at the beginning of the twentieth century. Evidence of a secondary population sweep in the UK and acquisition of further advantageous genes implies that S. equi is continuing to adapt, and therefore, continued investigations are required to determine further risks to the equine industry.
KW - Animals
KW - Horses
KW - Streptococcus equi/genetics
KW - Phylogeny
KW - Horse diseases/microbiology
KW - Evolution, Molecular
KW - Genome, Bacterial
KW - Streptococcal infections/veterinary
KW - Whole genome sequencing
KW - Prophages/genetics
KW - Bayes theorem
KW - Virulence factors/genetics
KW - Streptococcus
U2 - 10.1099/mgen.0.001366
DO - 10.1099/mgen.0.001366
M3 - Article
C2 - 40152912
SN - 2057-5858
VL - 11
SP - 1
EP - 13
JO - Microbial Genomics
JF - Microbial Genomics
IS - 3
M1 - 001366
ER -