Mycobacterium tuberculosis owes its success partly to its ability to enter a ‘dormant’, non-replicative state, reactivating years or even decades after initial infection. In this work, authors find that a key alteration in a gene involved in this dormancy response has evolved, or is evolving, in parallel in human-adapted lineages across the globe.
- Matthew Silcocks
- James P. Lingford
- Sarah J. Dunstan