The Host Adaptation of Staphylococcus aureus to Farmed Ruminants in New Zealand, With Special Reference to Clonal Complex 1

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2025-06

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John Wiley and Sons Ltd

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(c) 2025 The Author/s
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Abstract

Genetic features of host adaptation of S. aureus to ruminants have been extensively studied, but the extent to which this adaptation occurs in nature remains unknown. In New Zealand, clonal complex 1 (CC1) is among the most common lineages in humans and the dominant lineage in cattle, enabling between-, and within-CC genomic comparisons of epidemiologically cohesive samples of isolates. We assessed the following genomic benchmarks of host adaptation to ruminants in 277 S. aureus from cattle, small ruminants, humans, and pets: 1, phylogenetic clustering of ruminant strains; 2, abundance of homo-specific ruminant-adaptive factors, and 3, scarcity of heterospecific factors. The genomic comparisons were complemented by comparative analyses of the metabolism of carbon sources that abound in ruminant milk. We identified features fulfilling the three benchmarks in virtually all ruminant isolates, including CC1. Data suggest the virulomes adapt to the ruminant niche sensu lato accross CCs. CC1 forms a ruminant-adapted clade that appears better equipped to utilise milk carbon sources than human CC1. Strain flow across the human–ruminant interface appears to only occur occasionally. Taken together, the results suggest a specialisation, rather than mere adaptation, clarifying why zoonotic and zoo-anthroponotic S. aureus transmission between ruminants and humans has hardly ever been reported.

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bovine mastitis, comparative genomics, host adaptation, Staphylococcus aureus, whole genome sequencing

Citation

Nesaraj J, Grinberg A, Laven R, Chanyi R, Altermann E, Bandi C, Biggs PJ. (2025). The Host Adaptation of Staphylococcus aureus to Farmed Ruminants in New Zealand, With Special Reference to Clonal Complex 1. Environmental Microbiology Reports. 17. 3.

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as (c) 2025 The Author/s