New study suggests STD chlamydia frequently exchanges DNA to new strains
The bacteria that cause Chlamydia Treatment,
the world's most common sexually transmitted disease, seems to be
sneakier than once thought, as a new study suggests it frequently
exchanges DNA between different strains to form entirely new strains.
Chlaymydia
is caused by the bacteria Chlamydia trachomatis, and though its
symptoms are often mild, the sexually transmitted disease can cause
infertility in women and a discharge from the penis of an infected man.
Chlamydia is the most common bacterial STD in the world, including in
the U.S. where more than 1.3 million cases were reported in 2010. About
100 million cases of chlamydia are reported each year across the globe.
Scientists know there are two groups of Chlamydia Cure,
one that seems to infect the eyes and urinary-genital areas, and
another set known to spread through the lymphatic system, which is
important to the body's immune system. Currently, an epidemic of the
lymphatic types is progressing in Europe and North America, particularly
in men who have sex with men, the researchers note online on March 11
in the journal Nature Genetics.
However, little is known about how these different strains evolve and emerge.
"Scientists
recently discovered that if two chlamydia strains co-infect the same
person at the same time, they can swap DNA by a process called
recombination," lead researcher Dr. Simon Harris, from the Wellcome
Trust Sanger Institute, said in a statement.
To find out how
widespread this swapping is, Harris and colleagues compared the genome
sequences of 53 strains of C. trachomatis, which were isolated from
epidemics that occurred between 1959 and 2009; the strains were meant to
represent the diversity of chlamydia seen in clinical settings. Results
showed that even when the Chlamydia strains had infected different
parts of the body, they could still swap DNA with each other, leading to
new strains.
Recombination "was originally thought only to affect
a few 'hotspots' within the genome," Harris said. "We were very
surprised to find recombination is far more widespread than previously
thought."
The results have implications for how the STD is
diagnosed. Currently, doctors use a test that returns a positive or
negative for chlamydia infections, without any information on the
particular strain. That means doctors can't tell, say, if a person who
tests positive again after being treated with antibiotics has picked up a
second strain of chlamydia or if their treatment has failed.
While
antibiotic-resistant chlamydia has not been seen in patients, it does
occur in the lab. If it did occur in the general population, current
tests would not detect it.
"Until now a person treated with
antibiotics with a reoccurring infection of C. trachomatis was assumed
to have been re-infected," study researcher Dr. Nicholas Thomson, also
of the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, said in a statement. "The
current gaps in our understanding of the population makeup of chlamydia
limit our ability to implement health policies, because we do not fully
understand how chlamydia spreads within our population."
The scientists are now working with hospitals to bring technologies for whole-genome sequencing into clinical settings.
没有评论:
发表评论