Affiliation:
1. Equipe d'Accueil 3854, Institut Fédératif de Recherche 136 Agents Transmissibles et Infectiologie, UFR Médecine, Université François Rabelais de Tours, 37032 Tours Cedex, France
2. Service de Bactériologie et Hygiène Hospitalière et
3. Centre de Référence des Infections Ostéo-articulaires du Grand-Ouest (CRIOGO), Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Trousseau, 37044 Tours Cedex, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Skin and osteoarticular infections (SKI and OAI, respectively) account for almost one-third of
Streptococcus agalactiae
infections in nonpregnant adults. We evaluated the genetic diversity and phylogeny of 58
S. agalactiae
strains responsible for adult SKI or OAI and of 61
S. agalactiae
strains from cases of adult human colonization (HCol) by serotyping and multilocus sequence typing (MLST). We also assessed the prophage DNA content of the genomes of these strains by a PCR-based method. We found that 63% of SKI and 56% of OAI occurred in people aged 55 years and over. Overall, 71% of SKI strains were of serotype Ia or V, and 91% of OAI strains were of serotype Ia, III, or V. Strains of clonal complexes 1 and 23 (CC1 and CC23) were associated with 79% of SKI cases and 62% of OAI cases. Seven groups of strains, groups A, B, C, D, E, F, and G, were obtained by performing a hierarchical analysis on the basis of prophage DNA-PCR data. We found that 85% of CC1 strains clustered in DNA prophage group D, the group with the highest prophage DNA content (average, 4.4; average of absolute deviations [AVEDEV], 0.9). The CC23 strains displayed the greatest diversity in prophage DNA fragment content, but 47% of CC23 strains clustered in group B, which also had a high average prophage DNA content per strain (average, 2.3; AVEDEV, 0.6). Many (65%) of the OAI strains were in prophage DNA group D, whereas 83% of the SKI strains were in prophage DNA groups B and D. These data suggest that
S. agalactiae
strains from CC1 and CC23 may be subject to particular transduction mechanisms in gene recombination, rendering them particularly capable of invading the skin, bone, or joints in adults.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
19 articles.
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