1 research outputs found
Quantitative measurement of antibiotic resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis reveals genetic determinants of resistance and susceptibility in a target gene approach
The World Health Organization has a goal of universal drug susceptibility testing for
patients with tuberculosis; however, molecular diagnostics to date have focused largely
on first-line drugs and predicting binary susceptibilities. We used a multivariable linear
mixed model alongside whole genome sequencing and a quantitative microtiter plate
assay to relate genomic mutations to minimum inhibitory concentration in 15,211
Mycobacterium tuberculosis patient isolates from 23 countries across five continents.
This identified 492 unique MIC-elevating variants across thirteen drugs, as well as 91
mutations resulting in hypersensitivity. Our results advance genetics-based diagnostics
for tuberculosis and serve as a curated training/testing dataset for development of drug
resistance prediction algorithms