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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, April 2006, p. 1555-1557, Vol. 44, No. 4
0095-1137/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.44.4.1555-1557.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Clonal Distribution and Differential Occurrence of the Enterotoxin Gene Cluster, egc, in Carriage- versus Bacteremia-Associated Isolates of Staphylococcus aureus
Alex van Belkum,1
Damian C. Melles,1*
Susan V. Snijders,1
Willem B. van Leeuwen,1
Heiman F. L. Wertheim,1
Jan L. Nouwen,1
Henri A. Verbrugh,1 and
Jerome Etienne2
Department of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Dr. Molewaterplein 40, 3015 GD Rotterdam, The Netherlands,1
French Reference Center for Staphylococci, INSERM E0230, Faculté de Médecine Laennec, 7 rue Guillaume Paradin, 69008 Lyon, France2
Received 18 January 2006/
Accepted 25 January 2006

ABSTRACT
The
Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin gene cluster,
egc, was
detected in isolates from healthy individuals and in those from
patients with bacteremia. The
egc genes cooccur and are slightly
enriched in strains from healthy carriers (present in 63.7%
of carriage-associated isolates versus 52.9% of invasive isolates;
P = 0.03). Multilocus sequence typing revealed that successful
staphylococcal clones usually harbor the
egc locus.

TEXT
Staphylococcal enterotoxins are responsible for food-associated
outbreaks of diarrhea among humans. The toxins generate visible
pathological lesions in the stomach and the upper part of the
small intestine (
5). Many of the enterotoxins display superantigen
characteristics and are obvious targets for antistaphylococcal
therapies. Genes encoding several of the enterotoxins are physically
clustered in the
Staphylococcus aureus genome (
9,
16). The locus
encoding the enterotoxins SEG, SEI, SEM, SEN, and SEO is currently
known as
egc (enterotoxin gene cluster) (
9). Although this cluster
is highly prevalent among
S. aureus strains in general, antibodies
are rarely raised against
egc enterotoxins, which is a unique
feature of this group of enterotoxins (
7). It is intriguing
that the prevalence of
egc genes in isolates of
S. aureus is
negatively correlated with the severity of infection (
6). For
SEA, the situation is precisely opposite: the toxin gene is
significantly more often present in the invasive isolates (
6,
14). The conclusion could be that one or more of the
egc-encoded
enterotoxins provide protection against severe sepsis. Additional
research into this phenomenon is clearly warranted.
We here investigate whether strains isolated during Dutch S. aureus screening studies of carriage per se and S. aureus strains causing bacteremia (11, 19) can be differentiated on the basis of the absence or presence of the egc locus.
Three hundred ninety-one strains of S. aureus were included in the present study (Table 1). Most of the carriage isolates (n = 118) derived from the study by Wertheim et al. (19), in which patients were sampled at the time of hospitalization (MUP isolates). Another set of carriage strains (n = 86) derived from a group of elderly persons (over 50 years of age) in the open community (ERGO isolates) (11). As case strains, bacteremia-associated S. aureus strains (n = 180) from both these populations were included (11, 19). In addition, the group of invasive MUP isolates included strains isolated from pus (n = 7), and the nasal S. aureus carriage state for the bacteremic patients was also determined (12).
Strains were grown on blood agar plates (Becton-Dickinson, Le
Pont de Claix, France), and DNA was extracted using a bacterial
DNA kit III and a Magnapure system (Roche Molecular Systems,
Lelystad, The Netherlands). The SEM gene was amplified from
10 ng DNA using SEM-specific primers (40 cycles of 1 min at
94°C, 2 min at 55°C, and 3 min at 72°C) (
6). PCR
mixtures contained Supertaq DNA polymerase (Sphaero Q, Leiden,
The Netherlands). PCR products were analyzed by agarose gel
electrophoresis. The PCR products were of the expected lengths.
PCRs specific for SEG, SEO, SEI, and SEN were performed for
the MUP strains (
n = 212) (
6), as was multilocus sequence typing
(
11,
17,
18). Statistical analyses involved Fisher's exact test
(two-sided), with a
P value of <0.05 considered significant.
Table 2 shows that a positive score in the SEM PCR is strongly associated with positive scores for the SEI, SEO, SEN, and SEG enterotoxin genes. Overall, when positive in the SEM PCR, 96.7% (116/120) of these strains were positive for all of the toxins associated with egc. When negative in the SEM PCR, 85/92 (92.4%) of these strains were negative for all of the other toxin genes. When carriage strains were compared to all invasive isolates (blood and pus derived), it appeared that the carriage isolates harbored the egc locus significantly more often (130/204 versus 99/187; P = 0.0316) (Table 1). Although a clear biological rationale is currently lacking, this observation suggests that the presence of egc is associated with noninvasiveness and a lower disease-invoking potential, as suggested earlier (6). When the pus isolates were excluded from the analysis and the bacteremia-associated strains were compared separately to the carriage strains, the significance was maintained. However, the possible protective effect of egc does not involve changes in mortality once bacteremia has developed (49.4% [39/79] egc positive in bacteremia with no S. aureus-related mortality versus 53.3% [8/15] with S. aureus-related mortality; P = 1.0). Again, a biological explanation is lacking, and it has to be emphasized that numbers of cases are low.
Clonality is an important feature of the enterotoxin gene content
of strains. Some clones seem to be missing the
egc element (clonal
complexes [CCs] 1, 7, 8, and 15 [Table
3 ]). Strains from CCs
5, 22, 25, 30, and 45 are positive in at least 92.5% of cases.
Apparently, the
egc element is associated with specific staphylococcal
lineages, some of which are successful in the Rotterdam region
(
11).
It is interesting that the
egc enterotoxins may be associated
with staphylococcal toxic shock syndrome and scarlet fever (
8)
and that some of these toxins are enriched in genital isolates
(
1). Furthermore, Becker et al. showed that
seg and
sei genes
were found in strict combination in 53.0% of the invasive and
57.1% of the colonizing strains of
S. aureus, whereas the
sed and
sej genes were found significantly more often in blood isolates
(
P = 0.037) (
2). Ferry et al. showed that the presence of the
egc locus was lower in
S. aureus strains isolated from patients
with septic shock than in those isolated from septic patients
without shock, in strains isolated from patients with suppurative
disease, and in carriage strains (
6). The levels of antibodies
against SEG and SEI are elevated in women; this may reflect
mucosal adaptation of strains and a higher contact frequency
for women (
13). However, some of these studies were performed
with limited numbers of strains, and sometimes controversial
data are published. The association of SEG, SEH, SEI, SEO, and
SEM with food poisoning, for instance, is still ill-defined
(
3,
4).
We here describe the presence of egc in a large collection of carriage and invasive isolates of S. aureus deriving from the same geographical region. egc is (i) slightly enriched among carriage strains, (ii) not associated with mortality in patients suffering from staphylococcal bacteremia, and (iii) coupled to certain clonal lineages. There are surprising gaps in the capacities of different human sera to neutralize these superantigens (7). Furthermore, egc toxins seem to be produced in lesser quantities and have a lower immunogenic response than other enterotoxins (6), which may also explain why strains producing these egc enterotoxins are tolerated in the nose. The function of the enterotoxins and their immune tolerance need to be studied in detail. Also, the precise enterotoxin gene content of the egc locus is still unknown. For instance, the SEU toxin gene was detected only recently (10). The host range of staphylococci with different toxin gene repertoires needs additional investigation as well (15). We conclude that the egc locus may enhance the carriage potential of an S. aureus strain, which might be explained by the fact that most of the successful clones uniformly contain the egc locus.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Room L-313, Department of Medical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases, Dr. Molewaterplein 40, 3015 GD Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Phone: 31.10.463.3510. Fax: 31.10.463.3875. E-mail:
d.melles{at}erasmusmc.nl.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, April 2006, p. 1555-1557, Vol. 44, No. 4
0095-1137/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.44.4.1555-1557.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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