Background
The Latin American & Mediterranean (LAM) spoligotype family is one of the most successful genotype of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
worldwide and particularly prevalent in South-America. Within this family, a sublineage named Region of Difference Rio (RD
Rio
) was reported initially in Brazil and is characterized by a genomic deletion of about 26.3 kb. This lineage seems to show a specific adaptation to the Euro-Latin American population. In this context, we sought to evaluate the LAM family and the presence of the RD
Rio
genotype in samples from three Latin American countries including Paraguay, Venezuela and Argentina. To detect LAM strains reliably we applied a typing scheme using spoligotyping, 12 loci MIRU-VNTR, the Ag85C
103
SNP and the regions of difference RD
Rio
and RD174. IS6110-RFLP results were also used when available.
Results
Genotyping of 413
M. tuberculosis
isolates from three Latin-American countries detected LAM (46%) and the ill-defined T clade (16%) as the most frequent families. The highest clustering rate was detected in the sample population from the city of Caracas in Venezuela. We observed considerable differences in the presence of the RD
Rio
lineage, with high frequency in Caracas-Venezuela (55%) and low frequency in Buenos Aires-Argentina (11%) and Paraguay (10%). The molecular markers (RD174, Ag85C
103
, MIRU02-MIRU40 signature) of the RD
Rio
lineage were essentially confirmed. For the LAM family, the most polymorphic loci were MIRU40, MIRU31, MIRU10, MIRU26, MIRU16 and the least polymorphic MIRU24, MIRU20, MIRU04, MIRU23.
Conclusions
Our results suggest a differential adaptation of LAM-sublineages in neighboring populations and that RD
Rio
strains spread regionally with different rates of distribution. The Ag85C SNP and RDs (RD174, RD
Rio
) tested in this study can in fact facilitate molecular epidemiological studies of LAM strains in endemic settings and low-income countries.
Electronic supplementary material
The online version of this article (10.1186/s12866-019-1479-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.