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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2004, p. 825-828, Vol. 42, No. 2
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.2.825-828.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Community-Acquired Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus Isolated in Switzerland Contains the Panton-Valentine Leukocidin or Exfoliative Toxin Genes
Nadia Liassine,1* Raymond Auckenthaler,1 Marie-Christine Descombes,1 Michèle Bes,2 François Vandenesch,2 and Jerome Etienne2
Bioanalytique-Riotton, Unilabs, 1211 Geneva 2, Switzerland,1
Centre National de Référence des Staphylocoques, INSERM E0230, IFR62, Faculté de Médecine, 69372 Lyon cedex 08, France2
Received 4 June 2003/
Returned for modification 22 July 2003/
Accepted 23 October 2003

ABSTRACT
Among 10 strains of community-acquired methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) isolated in 2002 from patients
with skin infections, seven harbored the Panton-Valentine leukocidin
gene, two harbored the exfoliative toxin A gene, and one harbored
neither of these genes. CA-MRSA isolates producing a variety
of exotoxins are currently spreading in the Swiss community.

INTRODUCTION
Infections due to community-acquired methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) are a recent worldwide phenomenon (
1-
4,
6-
8,
13). Between 13 November 2002 and 5 March 2003, eight reports
of CA-MRSA infections or outbreaks were published on the ProMed
website of the International Society for Infectious Diseases
(
http://www.promedmail.org). The cases occurred in North America
(in the Los Angeles, Calif., gay community; a jail in Los Angeles;
a correctional facility in Ontario, Canada; and a school in
Pasadena, Tex.) and in Europe (France, Scotland, and The Netherlands).
Most patients had no known risk factors for colonization by
health care-associated bacteria, such as recent hospitalization
and/or contacts with health care workers. Skin infections were
most frequent, but rare cases of frequently fatal severe necrotizing
pneumonia also occurred. Most CA-MRSA isolates expressed Panton-Valentine
leukocidin (PVL), a highly potent toxin previously implicated
in these types of infections (
4,
5,
11).
From January to December 2002, we screened all CA-MRSA isolates identified in our laboratory (the main bacteriology laboratory serving private practitioners in the Geneva area of 400,000 inhabitants) for toxin genes (superantigenic toxins, leukocidins, and hemolysins), the accessory gene regulator (agr) allele group (alleles 1 to 4), and the staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (SCCmec) allele (I to IV). All isolates were subjected to molecular typing with previously described methods (9, 11, 15). Antimicrobial susceptibility testing was based on the microdilution method (Vitek 2 system, AST-P523 cards; bioMérieux, Marcy l'Etoile, France) and the disk diffusion method according to NCCLS recommendations (14). Resistance to methicillin was detected on screening agar medium (Mueller-Hinton oxacillin [bioMérieux] and oxacillin resistance screening agar [Oxoid]) and was confirmed by screening for PBP2a (Slidex MRSA detection; Denka Seiken) and the mecA gene, as described by Murakami et al. (12).
Among the 142 MRSA strains isolated during this period, 10 (7%) were from patients with no risk factors for acquisition of nosocomial bacteria and were thus designated CA-MRSA. The 10 patients, 7 of whom were children, had furunculosis (n = 6), scabby impetigo (n = 3), or folliculitis (n = 1) (Table 1). Methicillin resistance was heterogenous and was not detected on Vitek 2 in two isolates. The 10 CA-MRSA strains were resistant to few other antistaphylococcal antibiotics (Table 1). They all harbored the SCCmec type IV cassette usually found in CA-MRSA (16). Nine strains harbored the accessory gene regulator (agr) 3 allele, while the last strain, isolated from a patient with impetigo, harbored agr2 (Table 1). All six strains isolated from patients with furunculosis harbored the PVL genes and belonged to the French CA-MRSA clone initially reported by Dufour et al. (4), and identified by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) (Fig. 1). This clone probably spread to Geneva from neighboring France. The folliculitis strain also belonged to this clonal group but did not harbor the PVL genes. PVL-positive strains are rarely associated with folliculitis (11), and our strain may have derived from a recent PVL-positive ancestor that had lost the PVL-encoding prophage.
One of the three strains associated with scabby impetigo harbored
agr2 and, unexpectedly, the PVL genes but not the exfoliative
toxin gene (
eta or
etb) usually associated with bullous impetigo.
However, PVL-positive
S. aureus strains were recently isolated
from patients with nonbullous impetigo by Koning et al. (
10).
Our
agr2-positive, PVL-positive strain had a very different
PFGE pattern from those of the other strains (Fig.
1); this
was expected from the results of
agr grouping, showing the different
genetic background of
agr3 strains. It is noteworthy that the
patient infected by this strain had recently returned from Senegal.
The other two impetigo isolates carried the
eta gene (encoding
exfoliative toxin A) and had a PFGE profile related to that
of an
eta-positive CA-MRSA strain from Japan (Fig.
1) (
17).
The two patients had recently visited Angola and The Netherlands,
but not Japan. One possible explanation for the similarities
between the Japanese clone and our strains is that the
eta gene
and SSC
mecIV may have successfully integrated the genetic background
of these peculiar
agr3 strains. The genetic event leading to
this association may have occurred either independently on the
two continents or initially in Japan with subsequent spread
to Europe. To our knowledge this is the first report of CA-MRSA
carrying exfoliative toxin genes in Europe. The Japanese exfoliative
toxin-producing CA-MRSA strains were all associated with bullous
impetigo (
17), whereas our strains were isolated from patients
with scabby impetigo. Similarly, exfoliative toxin-producing
strains have been associated with some cases of nonbullous impetigo
(
10).
Studies of CA-MRSA throughout the world must now take into account the possible presence of exfoliative toxin genes, and no longer only PVL genes. The clinical infections associated with these two types of toxins are usually very different. PVL-producing strains are mainly associated with primary skin infections such as furunculosis, or with pneumonia secondary to influenza, whereas exfoliative toxin-producing strains tend to cause impetigo or scalded-skin syndrome. A limited number of CA-MRSA clones carrying the PVL genes are currently spreading across several continents (16). In Europe, closely related PFGE patterns have been reported for PVL-positive CA-MRSA isolated in Switzerland, France, and The Netherlands, pointing to clonal spread (http://www.eurosurveillance.org/ew/2003/030306.asp). These strains seem to spread by skin-to-skin contact. Our results suggest that exfoliative toxin-positive CA-MRSA strains are also spreading clonally, as two isolates from patients belonging to two distinct families belonged to the same clonal group and were also related to a Japanese exfoliative toxin-positive CA-MRSA strain.
Finally, our results suggest that the prevalence of CA-MRSA in Switzerland may be higher than previously suspected and thus call for closer systematic surveillance. The prevalence of CA-MRSA might be underestimated partly because skin infection samples are not routinely cultured. Moreover, resistance to oxacillin is heterogenous and can easily be missed by suboptimal screening methods. Our findings have led the Geneva city authorities to implement close surveillance of CA-MRSA, notably through family doctors.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Motoyuki Sugai for providing the Japanese strains,
Françoise Forey for PFGE, Christine Gardon and Christine
Courtier for technical assistance, and Luc Perrin for his help
and encouragement. We are grateful to David Young for editorial
assistance.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Bioanalytique-Riotton, 53 avenue Blanc, 1211 Geneva 2, Switzerland. Phone: 41 22 716 20 04. Fax: 41 22 716 20 07. E-mail:
nliassine{at}unilabs.ch.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2004, p. 825-828, Vol. 42, No. 2
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.2.825-828.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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