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Natural population dynamics and expansion of pathogenic clones of Staphylococcus aureus
Damian C. Melles, … , Henri A. Verbrugh, Alex van Belkum
Damian C. Melles, … , Henri A. Verbrugh, Alex van Belkum
Published December 15, 2004
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2004;114(12):1732-1740. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI23083.
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Article Infectious disease

Natural population dynamics and expansion of pathogenic clones of Staphylococcus aureus

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Abstract

The population structure of Staphylococcus aureus carried by healthy humans was determined using a large strain collection of nonclinical origin (n = 829). High-throughput amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis revealed 3 major and 2 minor genetic clusters of S. aureus, which were corroborated by multilocus sequence typing. Major AFLP cluster I comprised 44.4% of the carriage isolates and showed additional heterogeneity whereas major AFLP groups II and III presented 2 homogeneous clusters, including 47.3% of all carriage isolates. Coanalysis of invasive S. aureus strains and epidemic methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) revealed that all major clusters contained invasive and multiresistant isolates. However, clusters and subclusters with overrepresentation of invasive isolates were also identified. Bacteremia in elderly adults, for instance, was caused by a IVa cluster–derived strain significantly more often than by strains from other AFLP clusters. Furthermore, expansion of multiresistant clones or clones associated with skin disease (impetigo) was detected, which suggests that epidemic potential is present in pathogenic strains of S. aureus. In addition, the virulence gene encoding Panton-Valentine leukocidin was significantly enriched in S. aureus strains causing abscesses and arthritis in comparison with the carriage group. We provide evidence that essentially any S. aureus genotype carried by humans can transform into a life-threatening human pathogen but that certain clones are more virulent than others.

Authors

Damian C. Melles, Raymond F.J. Gorkink, Hélène A.M. Boelens, Susan V. Snijders, Justine K. Peeters, Michael J. Moorhouse, Peter J. van der Spek, Willem B. van Leeuwen, Guus Simons, Henri A. Verbrugh, Alex van Belkum

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Figure 4

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AFLP analysis versus MLST analysis of S. aureus. The bar in the center o...
AFLP analysis versus MLST analysis of S. aureus. The bar in the center of the figure represents the 1,056 strains divided into the 5 phylogenetic AFLP clusters (similar to those defined at the right side of Figure 1). MLST data is shown for 77 S. aureus strains, which are spread over the different AFLP clusters. The order of the MLST sequence types in this figure is determined by the location of the strain in the AFLP dendrogram (Figure 1). *Unknown ST; **6 of the 7 loci are similar to the particular ST; ***data not available.

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