Affiliation:
1. Applied Microbiology, Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Engineering, Lund University, Lund, Sweden
2. Laboratory of Food Quality Control and Hygiene, Department of Food Science and Technology, Agricultural University of Athens, Athens, Greece
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Staphylococcus aureus
strains producing the bacteriophage-encoded staphylococcal enterotoxin A (SEA) were divided into two groups, high- and low-SEA-producing strains, based on the amount of SEA produced. After growth under favorable conditions in batch cultures, 10 of the 21 strains tested produced more than 1,000 ng/ml SEA, and 9 strains produced less than 10 ng/ml SEA; two enterotoxigenic strains, MRSA252 and Newman, produced intermediate levels of SEA (around 450 ng/ml). The differences in the production of SEA were found to be associated with the expression level of
sea
and whether the strains hosted the
sea
1
or
sea
2
version. Furthermore, differences in nucleotide sequence in the
Siphoviridae
phage region showed two clonal lineages of the high-SEA-producing strains. One of these lines was correlated with the capacity for a massive increase in SEA levels by prophage induction as demonstrated using mitomycin C (MC). This was also confirmed by the occurrence of additional
sea
expression, presumed to be initiated by a latent phage promoter located upstream of the endogenous
sea
promoter. Remarkably, the SEA level was increased up to 10-fold in some strains due to prophage induction. The low-SEA-producing group and the high-SEA-producing subgroup lacking phage-activated
sea
transcription showed no increase in SEA formation after the addition of MC. This study demonstrates that
sea
expression in enterotoxigenic strains is correlated with the clonal lineage of
sea
-carrying phages. The high-SEA-producing group, in particular the prophage-inducible
sea
1
group, may be more relevant to staphylococcal food poisoning than the low-SEA-producing group, harboring mainly
sea
2
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
35 articles.
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