Affiliation:
1. Department of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Gärtner & Colleagues Laboratories, Ravensburg, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Modern taxonomy has delineated
Streptococcus gallolyticus
subsp.
gallolyticus
,
S. gallolyticus
subsp.
pasteurianus
,
Streptococcus infantarius
subsp.
coli
, and
S. infantarius
subsp.
infantarius
within the heterogenous group of previously designated clinical
Streptococcus bovis
bacteria. In the present study, 58 consecutive blood culture isolates initially designated
S. bovis
were further characterized by applying phenotypic and molecular genetic methods, and possible disease associations were investigated by studying the patients' records. Published phenotypic characteristics of
S. gallolyticus
and
S. infantarius
were not unequivocal and did not allow an unambiguous phenotypic differentiation of the 58 clinical isolates. However, full-length 16S rRNA gene sequences clearly assigned the strains to
S. gallolyticus
subsp.
gallolyticus
(
n
= 29),
S. gallolyticus
subsp.
pasteurianus
(
n
= 12), and
S. infantarius
subsp.
coli
(
n
= 17). Only 28% of the patients with available records presented with endocarditis and 7% presented with colon carcinoma, whereas 37% of the patients had altered liver parenchyma and 28% had gall bladder disease as underlying diseases. Detailed antimicrobial susceptibility data on both
S. gallolyticus
subspecies and
S. infantarius
subsp.
coli
are given for the first time. As a result of the extensive characterization of the largest number of
S. gallolyticus
and
S. infantarius
human clinical isolates published so far, emended species descriptions are given. It is recommended that both clinical microbiologists and infectious disease specialists avoid the designation
S. bovis
for true
S. gallolyticus
and
S. infantarius
strains in the future in order to get a clearer picture of the possible disease associations of these species.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
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