Affiliation:
1. Juntendo University, Department of Bacteriology, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We examined 97 strains of methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA) isolated between 1979 and 1985, the period of time when the appearance of MRSA strains increased, and we determined that these strains are distinct from the MRSA clones predominating in today's Japanese hospitals. Type IV staphylococcal cassette chromosome
mec
(SCC
mec
) strains were the most frequent, comprising 53.6% of all strains, followed by type I (22.7%) and type II (21.6%) SCC
mec
strains. Among the type IV SCC
mec
strains, the frequencies of two new subtypes, type IV.3 (IVc) and type IV.4 (IVd), were very high, comprising 38.1 and 10.3% of all strains, respectively. Forty-four of the 97 strains (45.3%) were Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL) positive. Among the PVL-positive strains, sequence type 30 (ST30)-SCC
mec
type IV strains producing type 4 coagulase were the most frequent. This is in striking contrast to the MRSA strains isolated in the 1990s, most of which were ST5-SCC
mec
type II strains producing type 2 coagulase and positive for the toxic shock syndrome toxin 1 gene. We also identified a new PVL-carrying prophage lysogenized in a type IV.3 SCC
mec
strain, 81/108. φ108PVL was distinct from the three extant PVL-carrying phages and was presumed to be carried by ST30-type IV.3 SCC
mec
strains isolated in Japan. These results provide genetic bases for the transition of MRSA clones in Japan that is commonly considered the transition from coagulase type 4 MRSA strains to coagulase type 2 MRSA strains. The results also suggested that MRSA strains that predominated between 1979 and 1985 were generated from PVL-positive methicillin-susceptible
S. aureus
strains through the integration of SCC
mec
elements.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology