Genetic population structure of Haemophilus influenzae at local and global scales

MacAlasdair N., Pöntinen AK., Ling C., Mallawaarachchi S., Thaipadungpanit J., Nosten FH., Turner C., Bentley SD., Croucher NJ., Turner P., Corander J.

Abstract Haemophilus influenzae is an opportunistic bacterial pathogen that causes both non-invasive and invasive disease in humans. Although the H. influenzae type b vaccine can reduce invasive disease, it is not effective against non-b serotypes or unencapsulated non-typeable H. influenzae (NTHi). The genetic population structure of H. influenzae , especially NTHi, which is typically prevalent in lower- and middle-income countries, is unclear. Here we whole-genome sequenced 4,474 isolates of H. influenzae from an unvaccinated paediatric carriage and pneumonia cohort from the Maela camp for displaced persons in northwestern Thailand. Despite no H. influenzae type b immunization, serotype b was uncommon, whereas 92.4% of the isolates were NTHi. Most multidrug-resistant lineages were NTHi, and there were no lineages enriched among disease samples. Incorporating 5,976 published genomes revealed a highly admixed population structure, low core genome nucleotide diversity and evidence of pervasive negative selection. Our findings expand our understanding of this major pathogen in lower- and middle-income countries and at a global scale.

DOI

10.1038/s41564-025-02171-9

Type

Journal article

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Publication Date

2025-10-31T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

10

Pages

3136 - 3147

Total pages

11

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