Bernadette C. Young
University of Oxford
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Featured researches published by Bernadette C. Young.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2010
David Griffiths; Warren N. Fawley; Melina Kachrimanidou; Rory Bowden; Derrick W. Crook; Rowena Fung; Tanya Golubchik; Rosalind M. Harding; Katie Jeffery; Keith A. Jolley; Richard Kirton; Tim Peto; Gareth Rees; Nicole Stoesser; Alison Vaughan; A. Sarah Walker; Bernadette C. Young; Mark H. Wilcox; Kate E. Dingle
ABSTRACT A robust high-throughput multilocus sequence typing (MLST) scheme for Clostridium difficile was developed and validated using a diverse collection of 50 reference isolates representing 45 different PCR ribotypes and 102 isolates from recent clinical samples. A total of 49 PCR ribotypes were represented overall. All isolates were typed by MLST and yielded 40 sequence types (STs). A web-accessible database was set up (http://pubmlst.org/cdifficile/ ) to facilitate the dissemination and comparison of C. difficile MLST genotyping data among laboratories. MLST and PCR ribotyping were similar in discriminatory abilities, having indices of discrimination of 0.90 and 0.92, respectively. Some STs corresponded to a single PCR ribotype (32/40), other STs corresponded to multiple PCR ribotypes (8/40), and, conversely, the PCR ribotype was not always predictive of the ST. The total number of variable nucleotide sites in the concatenated MLST sequences was 103/3,501 (2.9%). Concatenated MLST sequences were used to construct a neighbor-joining tree which identified four phylogenetic groups of STs and one outlier (ST-11; PCR ribotype 078). These groups apparently correlate with clades identified previously by comparative genomics. The MLST scheme was sufficiently robust to allow direct genotyping of C. difficile in total stool DNA extracts without isolate culture. The direct (nonculture) MLST approach may prove useful as a rapid genotyping method, potentially benefiting individual patients and informing hospital infection control.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Bernadette C. Young; Tanya Golubchik; Elizabeth M. Batty; Rowena Fung; Hanna Larner-Svensson; Antonina A. Votintseva; Ruth R. Miller; Heather Godwin; Kyle Knox; Richard G. Everitt; Zamin Iqbal; Andrew J. Rimmer; Madeleine Cule; Camilla L. C. Ip; Xavier Didelot; Rosalind M. Harding; Peter Donnelly; Tim Peto; Derrick W. Crook; Rory Bowden; Daniel J. Wilson
Whole-genome sequencing offers new insights into the evolution of bacterial pathogens and the etiology of bacterial disease. Staphylococcus aureus is a major cause of bacteria-associated mortality and invasive disease and is carried asymptomatically by 27% of adults. Eighty percent of bacteremias match the carried strain. However, the role of evolutionary change in the pathogen during the progression from carriage to disease is incompletely understood. Here we use high-throughput genome sequencing to discover the genetic changes that accompany the transition from nasal carriage to fatal bloodstream infection in an individual colonized with methicillin-sensitive S. aureus. We found a single, cohesive population exhibiting a repertoire of 30 single-nucleotide polymorphisms and four insertion/deletion variants. Mutations accumulated at a steady rate over a 13-mo period, except for a cluster of mutations preceding the transition to disease. Although bloodstream bacteria differed by just eight mutations from the original nasally carried bacteria, half of those mutations caused truncation of proteins, including a premature stop codon in an AraC-family transcriptional regulator that has been implicated in pathogenicity. Comparison with evolution in two asymptomatic carriers supported the conclusion that clusters of protein-truncating mutations are highly unusual. Our results demonstrate that bacterial diversity in vivo is limited but nonetheless detectable by whole-genome sequencing, enabling the study of evolutionary dynamics within the host. Regulatory or structural changes that occur during carriage may be functionally important for pathogenesis; therefore identifying those changes is a crucial step in understanding the biological causes of invasive bacterial disease.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2012
Derrick W. Crook; A. Sarah Walker; Yin Kean; Karl Weiss; Oliver A. Cornely; Mark A. Miller; Roberto Esposito; Thomas J. Louie; Nicole Stoesser; Bernadette C. Young; Brian Angus; Sherwood L. Gorbach; Tim Peto
Two recently completed phase 3 trials (003 and 004) showed fidaxomicin to be noninferior to vancomycin for curing Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) and superior for reducing CDI recurrences. In both studies, adults with active CDI were randomized to receive blinded fidaxomicin 200 mg twice daily or vancomycin 125 mg 4 times a day for 10 days. Post hoc exploratory intent-to-treat (ITT) time-to-event analyses were undertaken on the combined study 003 and 004 data, using fixed-effects meta-analysis and Cox regression models. ITT analysis of the combined 003/004 data for 1164 patients showed that fidaxomicin reduced persistent diarrhea, recurrence, or death by 40% (95% confidence interval [CI], 26%–51%; P < .0001) compared with vancomycin through day 40. A 37% (95% CI, 2%–60%; P = .037) reduction in persistent diarrhea or death was evident through day 12 (heterogeneity P = .50 vs 13–40 days), driven by 7 (1.2%) fidaxomicin versus 17 (2.9%) vancomycin deaths at <12 days. Low albumin level, low eosinophil count, and CDI treatment preenrollment were risk factors for persistent diarrhea or death at 12 days, and CDI in the previous 3 months was a risk factor for recurrence (all P < .01). Fidaxomicin has the potential to substantially improve outcomes from CDI.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2014
N C Gordon; James Price; Kevin Cole; Richard G. Everitt; Marcus Morgan; John Finney; Angela M. Kearns; Bruno Pichon; Bernadette C. Young; Daniel J. Wilson; Martin Llewelyn; John Paul; Tim Peto; Derrick W. Crook; A. S. Walker; Tanya Golubchik
ABSTRACT Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) could potentially provide a single platform for extracting all the information required to predict an organisms phenotype. However, its ability to provide accurate predictions has not yet been demonstrated in large independent studies of specific organisms. In this study, we aimed to develop a genotypic prediction method for antimicrobial susceptibilities. The whole genomes of 501 unrelated Staphylococcus aureus isolates were sequenced, and the assembled genomes were interrogated using BLASTn for a panel of known resistance determinants (chromosomal mutations and genes carried on plasmids). Results were compared with phenotypic susceptibility testing for 12 commonly used antimicrobial agents (penicillin, methicillin, erythromycin, clindamycin, tetracycline, ciprofloxacin, vancomycin, trimethoprim, gentamicin, fusidic acid, rifampin, and mupirocin) performed by the routine clinical laboratory. We investigated discrepancies by repeat susceptibility testing and manual inspection of the sequences and used this information to optimize the resistance determinant panel and BLASTn algorithm. We then tested performance of the optimized tool in an independent validation set of 491 unrelated isolates, with phenotypic results obtained in duplicate by automated broth dilution (BD Phoenix) and disc diffusion. In the validation set, the overall sensitivity and specificity of the genomic prediction method were 0.97 (95% confidence interval [95% CI], 0.95 to 0.98) and 0.99 (95% CI, 0.99 to 1), respectively, compared to standard susceptibility testing methods. The very major error rate was 0.5%, and the major error rate was 0.7%. WGS was as sensitive and specific as routine antimicrobial susceptibility testing methods. WGS is a promising alternative to culture methods for resistance prediction in S. aureus and ultimately other major bacterial pathogens.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Tanya Golubchik; Elizabeth M. Batty; Ruth R. Miller; Helen Farr; Bernadette C. Young; Hanna Larner-Svensson; Rowena Fung; Heather Godwin; Kyle Knox; Antonina A. Votintseva; Richard G. Everitt; Teresa Street; Madeleine Cule; Camilla L. C. Ip; Xavier Didelot; Tim Peto; Rosalind M. Harding; Daniel J. Wilson; Derrick W. Crook; Rory Bowden
Background Staphylococcus aureus is a major cause of healthcare associated mortality, but like many important bacterial pathogens, it is a common constituent of the normal human body flora. Around a third of healthy adults are carriers. Recent evidence suggests that evolution of S. aureus during nasal carriage may be associated with progression to invasive disease. However, a more detailed understanding of within-host evolution under natural conditions is required to appreciate the evolutionary and mechanistic reasons why commensal bacteria such as S. aureus cause disease. Therefore we examined in detail the evolutionary dynamics of normal, asymptomatic carriage. Sequencing a total of 131 genomes across 13 singly colonized hosts using the Illumina platform, we investigated diversity, selection, population dynamics and transmission during the short-term evolution of S. aureus. Principal Findings We characterized the processes by which the raw material for evolution is generated: micro-mutation (point mutation and small insertions/deletions), macro-mutation (large insertions/deletions) and the loss or acquisition of mobile elements (plasmids and bacteriophages). Through an analysis of synonymous, non-synonymous and intergenic mutations we discovered a fitness landscape dominated by purifying selection, with rare examples of adaptive change in genes encoding surface-anchored proteins and an enterotoxin. We found evidence for dramatic, hundred-fold fluctuations in the size of the within-host population over time, which we related to the cycle of colonization and clearance. Using a newly-developed population genetics approach to detect recent transmission among hosts, we revealed evidence for recent transmission between some of our subjects, including a husband and wife both carrying populations of methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA). Significance This investigation begins to paint a picture of the within-host evolution of an important bacterial pathogen during its prevailing natural state, asymptomatic carriage. These results also have wider significance as a benchmark for future systematic studies of evolution during invasive S. aureus disease.
Nature Communications | 2014
Richard G. Everitt; Xavier Didelot; Elizabeth M. Batty; Ruth R. Miller; Kyle Knox; Bernadette C. Young; Rory Bowden; Adam Auton; Antonina A. Votintseva; Hanna Larner-Svensson; Jane Charlesworth; Tanya Golubchik; Camilla L. C. Ip; Heather Godwin; Rowena Fung; Tim Peto; A. Sarah Walker; Derrick W. Crook; Daniel J. Wilson
Horizontal gene transfer is an important driver of bacterial evolution, but genetic exchange in the core genome of clonal species, including the major pathogen Staphylococcus aureus, is incompletely understood. Here we reveal widespread homologous recombination in S. aureus at the species level, in contrast to its near-complete absence between closely related strains. We discover a patchwork of hotspots and coldspots at fine scales falling against a backdrop of broad-scale trends in rate variation. Over megabases, homoplasy rates fluctuate 1.9-fold, peaking towards the origin-of-replication. Over kilobases, we find core recombination hotspots of up to 2.5-fold enrichment situated near fault lines in the genome associated with mobile elements. The strongest hotspots include regions flanking conjugative transposon ICE6013, the staphylococcal cassette chromosome (SCC) and genomic island νSaα. Mobile element-driven core genome transfer represents an opportunity for adaptation and challenges our understanding of the recombination landscape in predominantly clonal pathogens, with important implications for genotype–phenotype mapping.
PLOS Biology | 2015
Maisem Laabei; Anne-Catrin Uhlemann; Franklin D. Lowy; Eloise D. Austin; Maho Yokoyama; Khadija Ouadi; Edward J. Feil; Harry A. Thorpe; Barnabas Williams; Mark Perkins; Sharon J. Peacock; Stephen R. Clarke; Janina Dordel; Matthew T. G. Holden; Antonina A. Votintseva; Rory Bowden; Derrick W. Crook; Bernadette C. Young; Daniel J. Wilson; Mario Recker; Ruth C. Massey
Bacterial virulence is a multifaceted trait where the interactions between pathogen and host factors affect the severity and outcome of the infection. Toxin secretion is central to the biology of many bacterial pathogens and is widely accepted as playing a crucial role in disease pathology. To understand the relationship between toxicity and bacterial virulence in greater depth, we studied two sequenced collections of the major human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus and found an unexpected inverse correlation between bacterial toxicity and disease severity. By applying a functional genomics approach, we identified several novel toxicity-affecting loci responsible for the wide range in toxic phenotypes observed within these collections. To understand the apparent higher propensity of low toxicity isolates to cause bacteraemia, we performed several functional assays, and our findings suggest that within-host fitness differences between high- and low-toxicity isolates in human serum is a contributing factor. As invasive infections, such as bacteraemia, limit the opportunities for onward transmission, highly toxic strains could gain an additional between-host fitness advantage, potentially contributing to the maintenance of toxicity at the population level. Our results clearly demonstrate how evolutionary trade-offs between toxicity, relative fitness, and transmissibility are critical for understanding the multifaceted nature of bacterial virulence.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Sudip Das; Claudia Lindemann; Bernadette C. Young; Julius Muller; Babett Österreich; Nicola Ternette; Ann-Cathrin Winkler; Kerstin Paprotka; Richard Reinhardt; Konrad U. Förstner; Elizabeth Allen; Amy Flaxman; Yuko Yamaguchi; Christine S. Rollier; Pauline M. van Diemen; Sebastian Blättner; Christian W. Remmele; Martina Selle; Marcus Dittrich; Tobias Müller; Jörg Vogel; Knut Ohlsen; Derrick W. Crook; Ruth C. Massey; Daniel J. Wilson; Thomas Rudel; David H. Wyllie; Martin Fraunholz
Significance Staphylococcus aureus is a major cause of life-threatening bacterial infection. A significant risk factor for infection is nasal carriage. Previously, we reported spontaneous mutations during carriage associated with infection, including loss-of-function of the gene repressor of surface proteins (rsp). Here we use genomic screens, experimental assays, and molecular examination of rsp mutants from patients to understand how rsp is involved in infection; we find it has far-reaching effects on gene regulation. Paradoxically, rsp mutants exhibited attenuated toxicity and reduced disease severity early in experimental infection, without sacrificing the ability to cause abscesses and bloodstream infection. This work reveals a complex relationship between correlates of disease in the laboratory and in patients, demonstrating that life-threatening disease can be associated with reduced severity early in infection. Staphylococcus aureus is a major bacterial pathogen, which causes severe blood and tissue infections that frequently emerge by autoinfection with asymptomatically carried nose and skin populations. However, recent studies report that bloodstream isolates differ systematically from those found in the nose and skin, exhibiting reduced toxicity toward leukocytes. In two patients, an attenuated toxicity bloodstream infection evolved from an asymptomatically carried high-toxicity nasal strain by loss-of-function mutations in the gene encoding the transcription factor repressor of surface proteins (rsp). Here, we report that rsp knockout mutants lead to global transcriptional and proteomic reprofiling, and they exhibit the greatest signal in a genome-wide screen for genes influencing S. aureus survival in human cells. This effect is likely to be mediated in part via SSR42, a long-noncoding RNA. We show that rsp controls SSR42 expression, is induced by hydrogen peroxide, and is required for normal cytotoxicity and hemolytic activity. Rsp inactivation in laboratory- and bacteremia-derived mutants attenuates toxin production, but up-regulates other immune subversion proteins and reduces lethality during experimental infection. Crucially, inactivation of rsp preserves bacterial dissemination, because it affects neither formation of deep abscesses in mice nor survival in human blood. Thus, we have identified a spontaneously evolving, attenuated-cytotoxicity, nonhemolytic S. aureus phenotype, controlled by a pleiotropic transcriptional regulator/noncoding RNA virulence regulatory system, capable of causing S. aureus bloodstream infections. Such a phenotype could promote deep infection with limited early clinical manifestations, raising concerns that bacterial evolution within the human body may contribute to severe infection.
eLife | 2017
Bernadette C. Young; Chieh-Hsi Wu; N. Claire Gordon; Kevin Cole; James Price; Elian Liu; Anna E. Sheppard; Sanuki Perera; Jane Charlesworth; Tanya Golubchik; Zamin Iqbal; Rory Bowden; Ruth C. Massey; John Paul; Derrick W. Crook; Tim Peto; A. Sarah Walker; Martin Llewelyn; David H. Wyllie; Daniel J. Wilson
Bacteria responsible for the greatest global mortality colonize the human microbiota far more frequently than they cause severe infections. Whether mutation and selection among commensal bacteria are associated with infection is unknown. We investigated de novo mutation in 1163 Staphylococcus aureus genomes from 105 infected patients with nose colonization. We report that 72% of infections emerged from the nose, with infecting and nose-colonizing bacteria showing parallel adaptive differences. We found 2.8-to-3.6-fold adaptive enrichments of protein-altering variants in genes responding to rsp, which regulates surface antigens and toxin production; agr, which regulates quorum-sensing, toxin production and abscess formation; and host-derived antimicrobial peptides. Adaptive mutations in pathogenesis-associated genes were 3.1-fold enriched in infecting but not nose-colonizing bacteria. None of these signatures were observed in healthy carriers nor at the species-level, suggesting infection-associated, short-term, within-host selection pressures. Our results show that signatures of spontaneous adaptive evolution are specifically associated with infection, raising new possibilities for diagnosis and treatment.
Journal of Hospital Infection | 2017
Bernadette C. Young; Antonina A. Votintseva; Dona Foster; H. Godwin; Ruth R. Miller; Luke Anson; As Walker; Tim Peto; Derrick W. Crook; Kyle Knox
Summary Background Carriage of Staphylococcus aureus is a risk for infections. Targeted decolonization reduces postoperative infections but depends on accurate screening. Aim To compare detection of S. aureus carriage in healthy individuals between anatomical sites and nurse- versus self-swabbing; also to determine whether a single nasal swab predicted carriage over four weeks. Methods Healthy individuals were recruited via general practices. After consent, nurses performed multi-site swabbing (nose, throat, and axilla). Participants performed nasal swabbing twice-weekly for four weeks. Swabs were returned by mail and cultured for S. aureus. All S. aureus isolates underwent spa typing. Persistent carriage in individuals returning more than three self-swabs was defined as culture of S. aureus from all or all but one self-swabs. Findings In all, 102 individuals underwent multi-site swabbing; S. aureus carriage was detected from at least one site from 40 individuals (39%). There was no difference between nose (29/102, 28%) and throat (28/102, 27%) isolation rates: the combination increased total detection rate by 10%. Ninety-nine patients returned any self-swab, and 96 returned more than three. Nasal carriage detection was not significantly different on nurse or self-swab [28/99 (74%) vs 26/99 (72%); χ2: P = 0.75]. Twenty-two out of 25 participants with first self-swab positive were persistent carriers and 69/71 with first self-swab negative were not, giving high positive predictive value (88%), and very high negative predictive value (97%). Conclusion Nasal swabs detected the majority of carriage; throat swabs increased detection by 10%. Self-taken nasal swabs were equivalent to nurse-taken swabs and predicted persistent nasal carriage over four weeks.