holarctica subclades identified by Vogler et al. and Svensson et al. [15, 16] (See additional file 1 for an update of these SNP positions based on the latest SCHU S4 genome NC_006570). Subclades within the B.Br.013 group are Selleck BIBW2992 depicted in red. The Georgian isolate was placed in the basal node B.Br.013/020/023 (black arrow). (B) Maximum parsimony SNP phylogeny of four F. tularensis whole genome sequences from the B.Br.013 group. The Georgian strain
is highlighted in gray and is basal to the other three genomes. Newly identified branches (B.Br.027 and B.Br.026) are colored red and showed two major divisions within the B.Br.013 group. This phylogeny was rooted using OSU18 (not depicted). Bootstrap values are based on 1000 AZD5363 replicates in PAUP using a heuristic search. Additional analyses of the B.Br.013 group are crucial for fully understanding the phylogeography of F. tularensis subsp. holarctica in Europe and Asia. This group contains significant genetic diversity based upon multi-locus variable-number
tandem repeat (VNTR) analysis (MLVA) [15], indicating that considerable phylogenetic structure may exist that could be revealed with additional analyses. In addition, this group is widely distributed, extending from Eastern Europe into the border regions of the European/Asian continents. Importantly, the eastern geographic extent of the B.Br.013 group is very poorly understood. This is because, to date, it has not been possible to place F. tularensis isolates from countries at the selleck compound boundary of the European/Asian continents and Western Asia, including Georgia, into a larger phylogeographic context. Based on growth characteristics, biochemical analyses, find more basic PCR methods, and DNA sequencing, we know that F. tularensis subsp. holarctica is the predominant subspecies in Georgia and in regions further east [11, 19–21], but more specific genetic information is limited.
Some isolates from the European/Asian juncture regions and East Asia have been genotyped with a subset of VNTRs but have not been part of any global analyses [10, 22, 23]. Although valuable for regional studies, homoplasy associated with these rapidly-evolving markers restricts their value for global phylogenetic analyses [24]. In this study, we determined the phylogenetic structure of F. tularensis subsp. holarctica isolates from the European/Asian juncture country of Georgia by sequencing the genome of a Georgian isolate, comparing that genome to other available whole genome sequences to discover SNPs, and screening a subset of the resulting SNPs across 25 isolates from Georgia. We examined diversity within the subclades defined by these SNPs using a multiple-locus variable number tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) system [25]. To place the Georgian isolates into an existing global phylogeographic framework [15], we also screened a canonical subset of the newly discovered SNPs across a large panel of European isolates belonging to the B.Br.013 group.