RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Microevolution of pseudomonas aeruginosa in cystic fibrosis lungs JF European Respiratory Journal JO Eur Respir J FD European Respiratory Society SP P1962 VO 44 IS Suppl 58 A1 Nina Cramer A1 Jens Klockgether A1 Burkhard Tümmler YR 2014 UL http://erj.ersjournals.com/content/44/Suppl_58/P1962.abstract AB The chronic airway infections with Pseudomonas aeruginosa determine disease outcome in most individuals with cystic fibrosis (CF). We have collected serial P. aeruginosa isolates in half year intervals from all 35 CF patients at our local CF clinic who became colonized with P. aeruginosa in the 1980s. The microevolution of P. aeruginosa in CF lungs was investigated in the six patients with the mildest and most severe course of their chronic P. aeruginosa infection.Serial isolates were genotyped with a customized microarray. Isolates of the initially colonizing clone were then subjected to whole genome sequencing. Nucleotide variations compared to the PA14 genome were extracted, filtered, annotated and used for the reconstruction of clades. The 250 sequenced bacterial isolates were characterized in mutation rates, morphology, motility and secretion of virulence effectors.Exopolysaccharide biosynthesis, antimicrobial resistance and global regulators of lifestyle and metabolism are the most common functional categories whose genes were hit by mutations in the CF lungs. Microevolution was not uniform. The P. aeruginosa clone inhabiting severely affected lungs repetitively generated descendants with stop mutations or drastic amino acid changes in key genes of lifestyle, but these loss-of-function mutants were not recovered at later time points. In contrast, P. aeruginosa clones predominantly acquired benign amino acid substitutions in patients who maintained a normal function of their chronically colonized lungs for up to 30 years.Modes of microevolution of P. aeruginosa in CF lungs are associated with the severity of the chronic lung infection.