PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Vítor Borges AU - Dora Cordeiro AU - Ana Isabel Salas AU - Zohra Lodhia AU - Cristina Correia AU - Joana Isidro AU - Cândida Fernandes AU - Ana Maria Rodrigues AU - Jacinta Azevedo AU - João Alves AU - João Roxo AU - Miguel Rocha AU - Rita Côrte-Real AU - Luís Vieira AU - Maria José Borrego AU - João Paulo Gomes TI - <em>Chlamydia trachomatis</em> outbreak: when the virulence-associated genome backbone imports a prevalence-associated major antigen signature AID - 10.1101/622324 DP - 2019 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 622324 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/04/29/622324.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/04/29/622324.full AB - Chlamydia trachomatis is the most prevalent sexually transmitted bacteria worldwide and the causative agent of blinding trachoma. Strains are classified based on ompA genotypes, which are strongly linked with differential tissue tropism and disease outcomes. A lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV) epidemics, characterized by ulcerative proctitis, has emerged in the last two decades (mainly L2b genotype), raising high concern especially due to its circulation among men who have sex with men (MSM). Here, we report an ongoing outbreak (mostly affecting HIV-positive MSM engaging in high-risk practices) caused by an L2b strain with a rather unique genome makeup that precluded the laboratory notification of this outbreak as LGV due to its non-LGV ompA signature. Homologous recombination mediated the transfer of a ~4.5Kbp fragment enrolling CT681/ompA and neighboring genes (CT677/rrf, CT678/pyrH, CT679/tsf, CT680/rpsB) from a serovar D/Da strain likely possessing the typical T1 clade genome backbone associated with most prevalent genotypes (E and F). The hybrid L2b/D-Da strain presents the adhesin and immunodominant antigen MOMP (coded by ompA) with an epitope repertoire typical of non-invasive genital strains, while keeping the genome-dispersed virulence fingerprint of a classical LGV (L2b) strain. As previously reported for inter-clade ompA exchange among non-LGV clades, this unprecedented C. trachomatis genomic mosaic involving a contemporary epidemiologically and clinically relevant LGV strain may have implications on its transmission, tissue tropism and pathogenic capabilities. The emergence of such variants with epidemic and pathogenic potential highlights the need of more oriented surveillance strategies focused on capturing the C. trachomatis evolution in action.