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Dive into the research topics where Anna Vyazovaya is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Vyazovaya.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2002

Detection of Isoniazid-Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strains by a Multiplex Allele-Specific PCR Assay Targeting katG Codon 315 Variation

Igor Mokrousov; Tatiana Otten; Maxim Filipenko; Anna Vyazovaya; Eugeny Chrapov; Elena Limeschenko; Lidia Steklova; Boris Vyshnevskiy; Olga Narvskaya

ABSTRACT We describe a simple multiplex allele-specific (MAS)-PCR assay to detect mutations in the second base of the katG gene codon 315, including AGC→ACC and ACA (Ser→Thr) substitutions that confer resistance to isoniazid (INH) in Mycobacterium tuberculosis clinical isolates. The 315 ACC allele is found in the majority of Inhr strains worldwide, especially in areas with a high incidence of tuberculosis. The 315 ACA allele is characteristic of the New York City multidrug-resistant (MDR) strain W and its progenies in the United States. The mutations in katG315 are revealed depending on the presence or absence of an indicative fragment amplified from the wild-type allele of this codon. Initially optimized on the purified DNA samples, the assay was then tested on crude cell lysates and auramine-stained sputum slide preparations with the same reproducibility and interpretability of profiles generated by agarose gel electrophoresis. The MAS-PCR assay can be used for the detection of resistance to INH in clinical laboratories in regions with a high prevalence of MDR M. tuberculosis strains.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2004

Analysis of the Allelic Diversity of the Mycobacterial Interspersed Repetitive Units in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strains of the Beijing Family: Practical Implications and Evolutionary Considerations

Igor Mokrousov; Olga Narvskaya; Elena Limeschenko; Anna Vyazovaya; Tatiana Otten; Boris Vyshnevskiy

ABSTRACT A study set comprised 44 Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains of the Beijing family selected for their representativeness among those previously characterized by IS6110-RFLP and spoligotyping (Northwest Russia, 1997 to 2003). In the present study, these strains were subjected to mycobacterial interspersed repetitive units (MIRU) typing to assess a discriminatory power of the 12-MIRU-loci scheme (P. Supply et al., J. Clin. Microbiol. 39:3563-3571, 2001). The 44 Russian Beijing strains were subdivided into 12 MIRU types with identical profiles: 10 unique strains and two major types shared by 10 and 24 strains. Thus, basically, two distinct sublineages appear to shape the evolution of the Beijing strains in Russia. Most of the MIRU loci were found to be (almost) monomorphic in the Russian Beijing strains; the Hunter-Gaston discriminatory index (HGDI) for all 12 loci taken together was 0.65, whereas MIRU26 (the most variable in our study) showed a moderate level of discrimination (0.49). The results were compared against all available published MIRU profiles of Beijing strains from Russia (3 strains) and other geographic areas (51 strains in total), including South Africa (38 strains), East Asia (7 strains), and the United States (4 strains). A UPGMA (unweighted pair-group method with arithmetic averages)-based tree was constructed. Interestingly, no MIRU types were shared by Russian and South African strains (the two largest samples in this analysis), whereas both major Russian types included also isolates from other locations (United States and/or East Asia). This implies the evolution of the Beijing genotype to be generally strictly clonal, although a possibility of a convergent evolution of the MIRU loci cannot be excluded. We propose a dissemination of the prevailing local Beijing clones to have started earlier in South Africa rather than in Russia since more monomorphic loci were identified in Russian samples than in South African samples (mean HGDI scores, 0.08 versus 0.17). To conclude, we suggest to use a limited number of MIRUs for preliminary subdivision of Beijing strains in Russian (loci 26 + 31), South African (10 + 26 + 39), and global settings (10 + 26 + 39).


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2008

Mycobacterium tuberculosis Beijing Genotype in Russia: in Search of Informative Variable-Number Tandem-Repeat Loci

Igor Mokrousov; Olga Narvskaya; Anna Vyazovaya; Julie Millet; Tatiana Otten; Boris Vishnevsky; Nalin Rastogi

ABSTRACT The Beijing genotype is a globally spread lineage of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. In Russia, these strains constitute half of the local population of M. tuberculosis; they are associated with multidrug resistance and show increased transmissibility. Here, we analyzed traditional and new markers for the rapid and simple genotyping of the Beijing strains. A representative sample of 120 Beijing genotype strains was selected from a local IS6110-restriction fragment length (RFLP) database at the St. Petersburg Pasteur Institute. These strains were subjected to variable-number tandem-repeat (VNTR) typing using 24 loci of a newly proposed format and three hypervariable (HV) loci (QUB-3232, VNTR-3820, and VNTR-4120). Ten of the 27 VNTR loci were monomorphic, while five loci, MIRU26, QUB-26, QUB-3232, VNTR-3820, and VNTR-4120, were the most polymorphic (Hunter Gaston index, >0.5). VNTR typing allowed us to differentiate between two large IS6110-RFLP clusters known to be prevalent across the entire country (clusters B0/W148 and A0) and identified in 27 and 23% of strains, respectively, in the Beijing genotype database. The B0/W148 strains were grouped closely in the VNTR dendrogram and could be distinguished by a characteristic signature of the loci MIRU26 and QUB-26. Consequently, this clinically important IS6110-RFLP variant, B0/W148, likely presents a successful clonal group within the M. tuberculosis Beijing lineage that is widespread in Russia. To conclude, the IS6110-RFLP method and VNTR typing using a reduced set of the most polymorphic loci complement each other for the high-resolution epidemiological typing of the M. tuberculosis Beijing genotype strains circulating in or imported from Russia.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2008

Evaluation of New Variable-Number Tandem-Repeat Systems for Typing Mycobacterium tuberculosis with Beijing Genotype Isolates from Beijing, China

Wei Wei Jiao; Igor Mokrousov; Gui Zhi Sun; Ya Jie Guo; Anna Vyazovaya; Olga Narvskaya; A Dong Shen

ABSTRACT The newly proposed variable-number tandem-repeat (VNTR) typing system, which includes a basic 15-locus set and a high-resolution 24-locus set (P. Supply et al., J. Clin. Microbiol. 44:4498-4510, 2006), demonstrated a high power for the discrimination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates collected worldwide. To evaluate its ability to differentiate the Beijing genotype strains from the Beijing area in China, 72 isolates with typical Beijing or Beijing-like spacer oligonucleotide typing profiles were subjected to typing with the VNTR system (24 loci) and typing by restriction fragment polymorphism analysis with IS6110 (IS6110-RFLP). Compared to the “old” 12-locus VNTR typing method, use of the 15- and 24-locus systems had a dramatically improved power to discriminate the Beijing genotype strains. A subtle difference in the Hunter-Gaston discriminatory index (HGI) between the 15-locus and the 24-locus systems resulted from only one locus, Mtub29. However, the VNTR-based clusters could be further differentiated by IS6110-RFLP (HGI by IS6110 RFLP, 0.999), although in one case an IS6110 cluster was subdivided by the 15-locus VNTR system. In this sense, use of the newly proposed 15-locus VNTR system along with the Mtub29 locus can serve as a first-line typing method for the epidemiological study of M. tuberculosis isolates in Beijing, while secondary typing of clustered strains by IS6110-RFLP is still required.


European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2003

PCR-Based Methodology for Detecting Multidrug-Resistant Strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Beijing Family Circulating in Russia

Igor Mokrousov; T. Otten; Anna Vyazovaya; Elena Limeschenko; M. L. Filipenko; Christophe Sola; Nalin Rastogi; Steklova L; Vyshnevskiy B; Olga Narvskaya

The Beijing genotype of Mycobacterium tuberculosis has been identified in 40–50% of the clinical isolates studied in Russia during the last decade. This genotype has been reported to be associated with multiple drug resistance and possesses some significant pathogenic properties. Therefore, early identification of such strains is of extreme importance in the timely detection of drug resistance. The present study was performed on 354 strains isolated in Russia from 1996 to 2002 and previously characterised by IS6110-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) typing and spoligotyping. These strains included 198 Beijing family strains and 156 strains of other genotypes (IS6110-RFLP profiles). A subsequent polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis with IS6110-derived outwardly oriented primers (IS6110-PCR) easily discriminated the Beijing strains from non-Beijing strains. The multiplex allele-specific (MAS)-PCR assays were further used to detect mutations in katG315 and rpoB531, associated with resistance to isoniazid and rifampin, respectively. The katG315 and rpoB531 mutations were found to be more prevalent among Beijing (96.8% and 77.3%) than among non-Beijing strains (85.7% and 28%). Consequently, we propose a two-step methodology based on routine PCR and simple agarose gel electrophoresis in order to detect (i) a Beijing family strain using IS6110-PCR, and, (ii) its possible resistance to the major anti-tuberculosis drugs using specific MAS-PCR assays.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2005

Efficient Discrimination within a Corynebacterium diphtheriae Epidemic Clonal Group by a Novel Macroarray-Based Method

Igor Mokrousov; Olga Narvskaya; Elena Limeschenko; Anna Vyazovaya

ABSTRACT A large diphtheria epidemic in the 1990s in Russia and neighboring countries was caused by a clonal group of closely related Corynebacterium diphtheriae strains (ribotypes Sankt-Peterburg and Rossija). In the recently published complete genome sequence of C. diphtheriae strain NCTC13129, representative of the epidemic clone (A. M. Cerdeño-Tarraga et al., Nucleic Acids Res. 31:6516-6523, 2003), we identified in silico two direct repeat (DR) loci 39 kb downstream and 180 kb upstream of the oriC region, consisting of minisatellite (27- to 36-bp) alternating DRs and variable spacers. We designated these loci DRA and DRB, respectively. A reverse-hybridization macroarray-based method has been developed to study polymorphism (the presence or absence of 21 different spacers) in the larger DRB locus. We name it spoligotyping (spacer oligonucleotide typing), analogously to a similar method of Mycobacterium tuberculosis genotyping. The method was evaluated with 154 clinical strains of the C. diphtheriae epidemic clone from the St. Petersburg area in Russia from 1997 to 2002. By comparison with the international ribotype database (Institut Pasteur, Paris, France), these strains were previously identified as belonging to ribotypes Sankt-Peterburg (n = 79) and Rossija (n = 75). The 154 strains were subdivided into 34 spoligotypes: 14 unique strains and 20 types shared by 2 to 46 strains; the Hunter Gaston discriminatory index (HGDI) was 0.85. DRB locus-based spoligotyping allows fast and efficient discrimination within the C. diphtheriae epidemic clonal group and is applicable to both epidemiological investigations and phylogenetic reconstruction. The results are easy to interpret and can be presented and stored in a user-friendly digital database (Excel file), allowing rapid type determination of new strains.


BMC Genomics | 2014

Genome-Wide Mycobacterium tuberculosis Variation (GMTV) Database: A New Tool for Integrating Sequence Variations and Epidemiology

Ekaterina Chernyaeva; Marina V Shulgina; Mikhail Rotkevich; Pavel Dobrynin; Serguei Simonov; Egor A. Shitikov; Dmitry Ischenko; Irina Y. Karpova; Elena S. Kostryukova; Elena N. Ilina; Vadim M. Govorun; Vyacheslav Zhuravlev; Olga Manicheva; Peter K. Yablonsky; Yulia D. Isaeva; Elena Yu. Nosova; Igor Mokrousov; Anna Vyazovaya; Olga Narvskaya; Alla Lapidus; Stephen J. O’Brien

BackgroundTuberculosis (TB) poses a worldwide threat due to advancing multidrug-resistant strains and deadly co-infections with Human immunodeficiency virus. Today large amounts of Mycobacterium tuberculosis whole genome sequencing data are being assessed broadly and yet there exists no comprehensive online resource that connects M. tuberculosis genome variants with geographic origin, with drug resistance or with clinical outcome.DescriptionHere we describe a broadly inclusive unifying Genome-wide Mycobacterium tuberculosis Variation (GMTV) database, (http://mtb.dobzhanskycenter.org) that catalogues genome variations of M. tuberculosis strains collected across Russia. GMTV contains a broad spectrum of data derived from different sources and related to M. tuberculosis molecular biology, epidemiology, TB clinical outcome, year and place of isolation, drug resistance profiles and displays the variants across the genome using a dedicated genome browser. GMTV database, which includes 1084 genomes and over 69,000 SNP or Indel variants, can be queried about M. tuberculosis genome variation and putative associations with drug resistance, geographical origin, and clinical stages and outcomes.ConclusionsImplementation of GMTV tracks the pattern of changes of M. tuberculosis strains in different geographical areas, facilitates disease gene discoveries associated with drug resistance or different clinical sequelae, and automates comparative genomic analyses among M. tuberculosis strains.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Mycobacterium tuberculosis Population in Northwestern Russia: An Update from Russian-EU/Latvian Border Region

Igor Mokrousov; Anna Vyazovaya; Tatiana Otten; Viacheslav Zhuravlev; Elena Y. Pavlova; Larisa Tarashkevich; Valery Krishevich; Boris Vishnevsky; Olga Narvskaya

This study aimed to characterize the population structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Pskov oblast in northwestern Russia, to view it in the geographical context, to compare drug resistance properties across major genetic families. Ninety M. tuberculosis strains from tuberculosis (TB) patients, permanent residents in Pskov oblast were subjected to LAM-specific IS6110-PCR and spoligotyping, followed by comparison with SITVITWEB and MIRU-VNTRplus databases. The Beijing genotype (n = 40) was found the most prevalent followed by LAM (n = 18), T (n = 13), Haarlem (n = 10), Ural (n = 5), and Manu2 (n = 1); the family status remained unknown for 3 isolates. The high rate of Beijing genotype and prevalence of LAM family are similar to those in the other Russian settings. A feature specific for M. tuberculosis population in Pskov is a relatively higher rate of Haarlem and T types. Beijing strains were further typed with 12-MIRU (followed by comparison with proprietary global database) and 3 hypervariable loci QUB-3232, VNTR-3820, VNTR-4120. The 12-MIRU typing differentiated 40 Beijing strains into 14 types (HGI = 0.82) while two largest types were M2 (223325153533) prevalent throughout former USSR and M11 (223325173533) prevalent in Russia and East Asia. The use of 3 hypervariable loci increased a discrimination of the Beijing strains (18 profiles, HGI = 0.89). Both major families Beijing and LAM had similar rate of MDR strains (62.5 and 55.6%, respectively) that was significantly higher than in other strains (21.9%; P = 0.001 and 0.03, respectively). The rpoB531 mutations were more frequently found in Beijing strains while LAM drug resistant strains mainly harbored rpoB516 and inhA −15 mutations. Taken together with a high rate of multidrug resistance among Beijing strains from new TB cases (79.3% versus 44.4% in LAM), these findings suggest the critical impact of the Beijing genotype on the current situation with MDR-TB in the Pskov region in northwestern Russia.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2006

Rapid Detection of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Beijing Genotype and Its Ancient and Modern Sublineages by IS6110-Based Inverse PCR

Igor Mokrousov; Wei Wei Jiao; Violeta Valcheva; Anna Vyazovaya; Tatiana Otten; Ho Minh Ly; Nguyen Thi Ngoc Lan; Elena Limeschenko; Nadya Markova; Boris Vyshnevskiy; A Dong Shen; Olga Narvskaya

ABSTRACT The Mycobacterium tuberculosis Beijing genotype strains appear to be hypervirulent and associated with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis. Therefore, the development of a both rapid and simple method to detect the M. tuberculosis Beijing genotype is of clinical interest per se. Previously, we described a simple and fast approach to detect the Beijing genotype based on IS6110 inverse-PCR typing. Here, we evaluated this method against a large, diverse, and recent collection of strains. The study sample included 866 M. tuberculosis strains representing but not limited to the regions in Russia, Europe, and East Asia where the Beijing genotype is endemic. Based on a spoligotyping method, 408 strains were identified as Beijing genotypes; they were additionally subdivided into ancient and modern sublineages based on the analysis of the NTF locus. All strains were further subjected to the IS6110-based inverse PCR. All of the Beijing genotype strains were found to have identical two-band (ancient sublineage) or three-band (modern sublineage) profiles that were easily recognizable and distinct from the profiles of the non-Beijing strains. Therefore, we suggest using IS6110-based inverse-PCR typing for the correct identification of the Beijing genotype and its major sublineages. The method is fast and inexpensive and does not require additional experiments but instead is implemented in the routine typing method of M. tuberculosis.


European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2009

Novel macroarray-based method of Corynebacterium diphtheriae genotyping: evaluation in a field study in Belarus

Igor Mokrousov; Anna Vyazovaya; V. Kolodkina; Elena Limeschenko; L. Titov; Olga Narvskaya

In this study, we evaluated a novel macroarray-based spoligotyping method for Corynebacterium diphtheriae strain typing. A total of 20 C. diphtheriae biotype gravis toxigenic isolates collected in Belarus from suspected foci of diphtheria infection (diphtheria cases, carriers, or contacts) were subjected to DNA fingerprinting. All strains had an identical ribotyping profile that was identified as ribotype ‘Rossija’ by comparison with the international ribotype database at the Institut Pasteur of Paris. A spoligotyping method based on simultaneous reverse-hybridization analysis of two CRISPR (clustered, regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats) loci differentiated these strains into three spoligotypes. Comparison of the spoligotyping results with the epidemiological linkage network helped us to resolve suspected links in the chains of transmission. To conclude, the C. diphtheriae spoligotyping method demonstrated its utility in the field study, in particular, underlining the importance of the use of both CRISPR loci. The generated discrete data can be presented in digital binary format and be easily exchanged between laboratories and stored in local and global databases.

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Ekaterina Chernyaeva

Saint Petersburg State University

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Adong Shen

Capital Medical University

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Wei-Wei Jiao

Capital Medical University

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Violeta Valcheva

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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