2024 Volume 39 Issue 2 Article ID: ME23105
Shigella species are a group of highly transmissible Gram-negative pathogens. Increasing reports of infection with extensively drug-resistant varieties of this stomach bug has convinced the World Health Organization to prioritize Shigella for novel therapeutic interventions. We herein coupled the whole-genome sequencing of a natural isolate of Shigella flexneri with a pangenome analysis to characterize pathogen genomics within this species, which will provide us with an insight into its existing genomic diversity and highlight the root causes behind the emergence of quick vaccine escape variants. The isolated novel strain of S. flexneri contained ~4,500 protein-coding genes, 57 of which imparted resistance to antibiotics. A comparative pan-genomic analysis revealed genomic variability of ~64%, the shared conservation of core genes in central metabolic processes, and the enrichment of unique/accessory genes in virulence and defense mechanisms that contributed to much of the observed antimicrobial resistance (AMR). A pathway analysis of the core genome mapped 22 genes to 2 antimicrobial resistance pathways, with the bulk coding for multidrug efflux pumps and two component regulatory systems that are considered to work synergistically towards the development of resistance phenotypes. The prospective evolvability of Shigella species as witnessed by the marked difference in genomic content, the strain-specific essentiality of unique/accessory genes, and the inclusion of a potent resistance mechanism within the core genome, strengthens the possibility of novel serotypes emerging in the near future and emphasizes the importance of tracking down genomic diversity in drug/vaccine design and AMR governance.