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Western Superbugs Do Not Dominate in Pakistan – A collaborative research by University of the Punjab & The University of Helsinki
Western Superbugs Do Not Dominate in Pakistan – A collaborative research by University of the Punjab & The University of Helsinki


Subtitle: The first in-depth genomic surveillance of E.coli in the Punjab region of Pakistan has revealed surprising differences in the bacterial strains found compared to the UK, Norway and the USA.
Certain antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria endemic to the UK, Norway and the USA have not taken hold in Pakistan despite the widespread use of antibiotics in this region.
A collaborative team from the Wellcome Sanger Institute, the University of Helsinki, the University of Oslo, the University of the Punjab, and others has highlighted ‘remarkable and unexpected differences’ in the distribution of Escherichia coli (E.coli) between Punjab in Pakistan, Europe, and the USA.
The new study, published (18 June) in Nature Communications, also showed that the E.coli strains responsible for many urinary tract infections, and common in countries including the UK, are not found in the Punjab region.
This is the first time the impact of antibiotics on treatment-resistant bacteria has been detailed in Pakistan. It found that while antibiotic use increased the prevalence of certain resistant strains by over 200%, these were generally outcompeted by other strains of E. coli, most likely due to environmental selection pressures resulting from lower levels of sanitation and differences in food hygiene.
Understanding more about the factors that stop these strains from taking hold in the Punjab region could help highlight new ways to reduce the spread of harmful strains in other parts of the world. Ongoing genomic surveillance could also assist in predicting and stopping infection outbreaks.
The bacterium, E.coli is a leading cause of lethal infections worldwide1. Most strains of E.coli are harmless and commonly found in the gut. However, if the bacterium gets into the bloodstream due to a weakened immune system it can cause infections, ranging from mild to life-threatening.
As an added challenge for healthcare providers, antibiotic resistance has become a frequent feature of such infections. Rates of antibiotic resistance in E.coli vary globally and in the UK, over 40 per cent of E.coli bloodstream infections are resistant to a key antibiotic2.
Genomic surveillance can map different strains of E.coli in a region, highlighting which ones are resistant to treatment and tracking those that cause serious infections. Recently, scientists have used these data to investigate factors involved in the spread of drug-resistant bacteria3. However, this research has focused on Western countries such as the UK, Norway, and the USA but antibiotic use and antibiotic-resistant bacteria are present worldwide.
In this new study, a collaboration between the Wellcome Sanger Institute, the University of Helsinki, the University of Oslo, the University of the Punjab, and others, researchers gathered 1,411 samples from 494 outpatients and 423 community members. In some cases, samples were collected before, during, and after the patient took antibiotics to see the impact this had.
The team then used a novel high-resolution deep-sequencing approach developed by co-first author Dr Tommi Mäklin to gain an in-depth genetic understanding of all the E.coli strains in a sample.
The overall distribution differs considerably from studies conducted in Europe and the USA, most notably that endemic strains found in Western countries are not established in Pakistan and the E.coli strains that are leading causes of urinary tract infections in the West are extremely rare.
They also found that apart from the most common strain which is present in both Pakistan and Europe, the top most common strains in Pakistan are rare in Europe and are linked to natural colonisation of the microbiome, not infections. The third most common strain has been found in surveillance in Western countries where it is related to food-borne illness.
Genes that give rise to antibiotic resistance are found in E. coli strains in the Punjab region, with the use of antibiotics increasing the amounts of certain strains by 200%. However, once the treatment was completed, the antibiotic-resistant E. coli strains did not continue to spread.
This suggests that the use of antibiotics created an environment where antibiotic-resistant E. coli had the upper hand, but these strains could not outcompete others once the selection pressure was lost.
Antibiotics are used widely in the Punjab region. However, researchers suggest that due to the differences in sanitation between Punjab and countries such as the UK and Norway, the environmental selection pressures are higher. This means that there is a complex interplay between antibiotic resistance and other traits needed for an E. coli strain to become established in the Punjab region.
Professor Waheed Akhtar from the University of the Punjab said:  “This is the first time that an in-depth understanding of E. coli in the Punjab region has been captured and highlights how different environments and healthcare systems can face, and facilitate, a completely different set of bacterial strains and threats. Understanding the bacterial strains present in the Punjab region helps our public health and medical professionals better understand what threats there are in an area, and what could help minimise them. This study shows the importance of having genomic surveillance knowledge and highlights which bacterial strains should be a focus of further research in Pakistan. A future study relating the bacterial genomic data with antibiotic resistance may be an important follow-up to this work.”
Dr Tamin Khawaja, co-first author from the University of Helsinki, said: “During our research, we worked closely with our collaborators in the Punjab region, and saw first-hand that physicians often had less than a minute per patient. This typically leads to them prescribing broad-spectrum antibiotics to ensure as many of the possible causes of sickness are addressed at once. Our research was the first time that the impact of such antibiotic use in the Punjab region was tracked, and shows that this region will require different interventions compared to places such as the UK and Norway. Antibiotic resistance is a global healthcare crisis, one that is often a greater issue in countries with fewer resources. It isn’t enough that the unnecessary use of antibiotics is reduced in western countries, it is in everyone’s best interests to work together and help all countries use antibiotics more rationally.”
Dr Tommi Mäklin, co-first author from the University of Helsinki and visiting worker at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, said: “E.coli are responsible for infections worldwide, and it’s crucial to understand and track the most dangerous strains if we hope to predict and stop their future spread. Being able to dive into the genetics of different E.coli strains and understand factors that drive their spread asymptomatically is incredibly helpful in the fight against infections. Humans do not exist in a vacuum, and if we could create an environment that is less favourable to dangerous and treatment-resistant bacteria, we could tip the scales in our favour while taking a holistic approach to public health.”
Professor Jukka Corander, co-senior author from the Wellcome Sanger Institute, said: “Using the innovative deep-sequencing approach developed by Tommi Mäklin, we were able to show remarkable and unexpected differences in the distribution of E.coli between Pakistan and previously studied Western countries. These differences, including the lack of fitness in antibiotic-resistant strains seen in Pakistan that are endemic to the UK and Norway, and those that are the leading causes of urinary tract infections, highlight how  E.coli distribution can depend on the environmental factors in an area. They also show that it’s incredibly difficult to predict the success of strains without local data and therefore, conducting ongoing holistic and worldwide genomic surveillance of E.coli is essential to capturing the full picture of what strains are circulating, how they spread, and what could help stop them.”
Contact details:
Rachael Smith
Press Office
Wellcome Sanger Institute
Cambridge, CB10 1SA
07827979492
Email: press.office@sanger.ac.uk
Notes to Editors:
1.
Antimicrobial Resistance Collaborators. (2022) Global burden of bacterial antimicrobial resistance in 2019: a systematic analysis. The Lancet. DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(21)02724-0
2.
UK Health Security Agency. New data shows 148 severe antibiotic-resistant infections a day in 2021. Available at: https://www.gov.uk/government/news/new-data-shows-148-severe-antibiotic-resistant-infections-a-day-in-2021.
3.
An example of previous work from Professor Jukka Corander on tracking the factors involved in the spread of AMR E. coli can be found here: https://www.sanger.ac.uk/news_item/antibiotic-use-is-not-the-only-driver-of-superbugs/
Publication:
T. Khawaja, T. Mäklin, T. Kallonen, et al. (2024) Deep sequencing of Escherichia coli displays marked colonisation diversity and impact of antibiotic use in Punjab, Pakistan. Nature Communications. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-49591-5
Funding:
This research was part-funded by Helsinki University, the Sigrid Jusélius Foundation, the Trond Mohn Foundation, Wellcome, and the Academy of Finland. A full acknowledgement list can be found in the publication.
Selected websites:
The University of Helsinki is one of the world’s leading multidisciplinary research universities, renowned for its high-quality teaching, research and innovation. It is proud to be constantly ranked among the top one hundred best universities in the world.
The university has an enrolment of over 35 000 students and it offers a wide range of Master’s programmes taught in English. Established in 1640, the University of Helsinki is the oldest university in Finland.
University of the Punjab, Lahore
University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan, established in 1882, is the oldest and the largest university of the country. The University has a student enrolment nearing 40,000 and a faculty strength of about 1,400. Many of them have doctorate degree from some of the best western universities. The academic programs of the University are divided between the nineteen faculties. The School of Biological Sciences, the collaborating institution in this study, is a part of the Faculty of Life Sciences. Research in the School includes studies on some of the infectious diseases. The researchers are interested to work in collaboration with other national and international groups.
The Wellcome Sanger Institute
The Wellcome Sanger Institute is a world leader in genomics research. We apply and explore genomic technologies at scale to advance understanding of biology and improve health. Making discoveries not easily made elsewhere, our research delivers insights across health, disease, evolution and pathogen biology. We are open and collaborative; our data, results, tools, technologies and training are freely shared across the globe to advance science.
Funded by Wellcome, we have the freedom to think long-term and push the boundaries of genomics. We take on the challenges of applying our research to the real world, where we aim to bring benefit to people and society.
Find out more at www.sanger.ac.uk or follow us on Twitter, Instagram, FacebookLinkedIn and on our Blog.
About Wellcome
Wellcome supports science to solve the urgent health challenges facing everyone. We support discovery research into life, health and wellbeing, and we’re taking on three worldwide health challenges: mental health, infectious disease and climate and health. https://wellcome.org/