Streptococcus pyogenes causing toxic-shock-like syndrome and other invasive diseases: clonal diversity and pyrogenic exotoxin expression.

JM Musser, AR Hauser, MH Kim… - Proceedings of the …, 1991 - National Acad Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1991National Acad Sciences
Genetic diversity and relationships among 108 isolates of the bacterium Streptococcus
pyogenes recently recovered from patients in the United States with toxic-shock-like
syndrome or other invasive diseases were estimated by multilocus enzyme electrophoresis.
Thirty-three electrophoretic types (ETs), representing distinctive multilocus clonal genotypes,
were identified, but nearly half the disease episodes, including more than two-thirds of the
cases of toxic-shock-like syndrome, were caused by strains of two related clones (ET 1 and …
Genetic diversity and relationships among 108 isolates of the bacterium Streptococcus pyogenes recently recovered from patients in the United States with toxic-shock-like syndrome or other invasive diseases were estimated by multilocus enzyme electrophoresis. Thirty-three electrophoretic types (ETs), representing distinctive multilocus clonal genotypes, were identified, but nearly half the disease episodes, including more than two-thirds of the cases of toxic-shock-like syndrome, were caused by strains of two related clones (ET 1 and ET 2). These two clones were also represented by recent pathogenic European isolates. A previous report of a relatively high frequency of expression of exotoxin A among isolates recovered from toxic-shock-like syndrome patients in the United States was confirmed; and the demonstration of this association both within clones and among distantly related clones supports the hypothesis that exotoxin A is a causal factor in pathogenesis of this disease. Near identity of the nucleotide sequences of the exotoxin A structural gene of six isolates of five ETs in diverse phylogenetic lineages was interpreted as evidence that the gene has been horizontally distributed among clones, presumably by bacteriophage-mediated transfer.
National Acad Sciences