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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2008, p. 456-461, Vol. 46, No. 2
0095-1137/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.01734-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Pulsed-Field Gel Electrophoresis of Staphylococcus aureus Isolates from Atopic Patients Revealing Presence of Similar Strains in Isolates from Children and Their Parents
Sonja Bonness,1,2
Christiane Szekat,1
Natalija Novak,2 and
Gabriele Bierbaum1*
Institut für Medizinische Mikrobiologie, Immunologie und Parasitologie der Universität Bonn, Sigmund-Freud-Str. 25, D-53105 Bonn, Germany,1
Klinik und Poliklinik für Dermatologie der Universität Bonn, Sigmund-Freud-Str. 25, D-53105 Bonn, Germany2
Received 31 August 2007/
Returned for modification 1 November 2007/
Accepted 26 November 2007

ABSTRACT
Skin colonization with
Staphylococcus aureus is often associated
with atopic dermatitis, and staphylococcal enterotoxins have
been implicated in the etiology of atopic disease. In this study,
the colonization of patients with atopic dermatitis and their
parents was investigated in order to evaluate the possibility
of intrafamiliar transmission.
S. aureus strains were isolated
from 30 of 45 patients (66%). In 19 of 29 families (65%), at
least one parent carried
S. aureus, and the overall colonization
rate of the parents was 48%. All strains were typed by pulsed-field
gel electrophoresis (PFGE), and the presence of enterotoxin
genes in the strains was assayed by multiplex PCR. A high percentage
(84%) of the isolates present on the children and on at least
one of their parents displayed identical PFGE and enterotoxin
patterns as well as identical antibiotic resistance profiles,
indicating intrafamiliar transmission. Forty-five percent of
the strains did not carry any enterotoxin gene. The most frequently
found enterotoxin genes were
seg and
sei, which were present
in 36% of the strains, and
seb, which was found in 24% of the
strains. The other toxin genes occurred only in low frequencies.
Most strains were resistant to penicillin (82%), and 15% showed
resistance to more than one antibiotic. Intermediately-vancomycin-resistant
S. aureus or methicillin-resistant
S. aureus strains were not
detected. In conclusion, this study indicates that the colonization
rate of parents of atopic children is rather high and may increase
the risk of recolonization of the child.

INTRODUCTION
Staphylococcus aureus is a gram-positive pathogen that has been
implicated in the pathogenesis of atopic dermatitis (AD). AD
is one of the most frequent chronic inflammatory skin diseases
and is found in 10% of all German children starting school (
35).
It is characterized by a dysregulation of the immune system
that involves an increased Th2 response with an enhanced level
of Th2 cytokines in the acute phase, a decreased level of other
cytokines (e.g., tumor necrosis factor alpha), and decreased
production of antistaphylococcal peptides of the innate immune
system, i.e., β-defensin 3 and cathelicidins (
12,
30).
This peptide deficiency, the impaired skin integrity, and the
increased expression of fibrinogen (
9) favor colonization with
S. aureus in AD, which is found in a higher percentage on the
skin of affected children than on the skin of a healthy control
group (
23). Many strains of
S. aureus are able to secrete superantigens,
i.e., enterotoxins and toxic shock syndrome toxin. The production
of superantigens may lead to an aggravation of AD (
3), and a
reduction of colonization has been shown to be effective in
reducing the severity of the disease (
14). Furthermore, exposure
to superantigens may lead to the sensitization of the patient
and the production of specific immunoglobulin E antibodies against
enterotoxin A and enterotoxin B. These antibody titers were
found to be elevated in patients with severe skin lesions (
17,
25). Therefore, a reduction of
S. aureus colonization in AD
patients is desired. This study was conducted in order to assess
the colonization of atopic patients and transmission of the
strains between children and their parents. Moreover, whereas
the roles of enterotoxins A, B, and C and toxic shock syndrome
toxin in AD have been studied (
7,
17), in the last years, a
number of new enterotoxin genes have been detected in
S. aureus (for a review, see references
21 and
40), and a further aim
of this study was to determine the frequency of these genes
in strains isolated from patients with AD. Besides, there is
an increasing incidence of community-acquired methicillin-resistant
S. aureus (
34), and the first reports of infection of AD patients
with methicillin-resistant strains in the far east (
1,
16) and
the United States (
38) have been published, which led us to
determine the antibiotic susceptibilities of our isolates.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Strains and media.
A total of 67 isolates from patients and their parents who visited
the outpatient clinic at the Department of Dermatology, University
of Bonn, were characterized in this study. The samples were
taken from lesional skin and the anterior nares (patients) or
the anterior nares only (relatives) using Metaswab tubes (Mast,
Brescia, Italy) and were cultured within 24 h on Columbia blood
agar (Becton Dickinson, Heidelberg, Germany). The identification
of
S. aureus was carried out by testing the production of clumping
factor and free coagulase.
S. aureus strains were stored as
frozen stocks in 50% glycerol at –70°C and were cultured
in brain heart infusion medium (Oxoid, Wesel, Germany) at 37°C
with aeration unless indicated otherwise.
PFGE.
Chromosomal DNA for the SmaI restriction digest was purified from the strains as described previously (12). Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) was performed using the Chef DRIII system (Bio-Rad, Munich, Germany) by employing pulsed-field certified agarose (1%) (Bio-Rad) at 6 V/cm, a field angle of 120°, and switch times of 5 to 15 s for 7 h and 15 to 60 s for a further 19 h. A chromosomal DNA digest of S. aureus NCTC8325 served as the mass standard.
Antimicrobial susceptibility tests.
Antimicrobial susceptibility tests against penicillin, methicillin, oxacillin, cefazolin, cefoxitin, imipenem, gentamicin, netilmicin, erythromycin, clindamycin, doxycycline, ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin, fosfomycin, teicoplanin, vancomycin, mupirocin, fusidic acid, and linezolid (Oxoid, Hampshire, England) were performed according to protocols recommended by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute or DIN 58940-4 by employing the disk diffusion method or Etest (AB Biodisk, Solna, Sweden).
PCR of enterotoxin genes.
Attempts to perform a PCR employing whole cells were unsuccessful. Therefore, chromosomal DNA was purified using Genomic-Tips 20/G (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) after cell lysis in the presence of lysostaphin (Sigma-Aldrich, Taufkirchen, Germany) or by employing the Instagene Matrix kit (Bio-Rad), both in accordance with the manufacturers' instructions. DNA was analyzed using a Nanodrop 1000 spectrophotometer (Peqlab Biotechnologie, Erlangen, Germany).
The presence of enterotoxin genes was screened by two multiplex PCR assays covering the sea, seb, sec, seh, and sej (group 1) genes or the sed, see, seg, and sei (group 2) genes. The primers seb-sec forward, seb reverse, sei forward, and sei reverse were described previously by Løvseth et al. (26), whereas all other primers were designed as described previously by Monday and Bohach (28), using the 16S rRNA gene as an internal control for both groups. The PCR conditions were 95°C for 10 min for the initial denaturation step, followed by 20 cycles (denaturation step at 95°C for 1 min, annealing step at 68°C for 45 s, and primer elongation step at 72°C for 1 min), which were followed by 30 cycles with an annealing step at 62°C and a final elongation step at 72°C for 10 min. When only sei or seg had been detected in a strain, the presence of the second gene was probed using additional alternative primers for seg and sei that had been designed according to nucleotide exchanges described previously (6): seghinmut (5'-ATGTCTCCACCTGTTGAAGG-3'), seihinmut (5'-CAACTTGAATTTTCAACCGGTACC-3'), and seirueckmut (5'-CAGGCAGACCATGTCCTG-3').
These primers were employed in a conventional PCR (Go Taq polymerase; Promega GmbH, Mannheim, Germany) (annealing step at 60°C and 30 cycles). All positive multiplex PCR signals were verified by conventional PCR by employing the specific primers at an annealing temperature of 60°C for 30 cycles.
The following S. aureus reference strains were employed: S. aureus Mu50 (sea, sei, and seg) (20), S. aureus ATCC 14458/NCTC10654 (seb) (2), S. aureus LT 759/04 (Reference Centre for Staphylococci, Bonn, Germany) (sea and sec), S. aureus ATCC 23235/NCTC10656 (sed and sej) (8), and S. aureus ATCC 27664 (see) (5).

RESULTS
Colonization of atopic children and their families with S. aureus.
One hundred fifty-six samples originating from 45 patients and
their relatives were evaluated in this study. Representative
skin lesions and the anterior nares of the patients were swabbed.
Forty-three
S. aureus isolates were obtained from 30 patients
(66%). Fifteen children were not colonized. The 30 colonized
children (17 patients 1 to 3 years of age, 6 patients 4 to 6
years of age, 3 patients 7 to 9 years of age, and four patients
9 to 17 years of age; mean age, 4.8 years) belonged to 29 different
families. Relatives who accompanied these patients to the clinic
were also probed for colonization with
S. aureus using nose
swabs. For 23 families, both father and mother were examined.
Here, 13 mothers (57%) and 9 fathers (39%) were positive for
S. aureus, and in 19 of the 23 families, at least one parent
was colonized (Table
1). In total, the colonization rate of
the parents was 48%. In six cases, it was not possible to obtain
a sample from the father.
All 67 isolates were characterized by PFGE. The analyses showed
that in 16 (84%) of the 19 families where an isolate had been
obtained from at least one parent, isolates with an indistinguishable
PFGE pattern were present on the patient and his (her) mother
or father. In 10 cases, the patient strain colonized the mother,
and in six cases, a similar strain was present on the father.
In three cases, strains with related patterns were isolated
from the father. In one family (patient 16), all members were
colonized by the same strain (Table
1). For 15 patients, isolates
had been collected from infected skin and nose, and 11 patients
(73%) were colonized with identical strains in both locations
(Table
2). As a consequence, the
S. aureus isolates obtained
in this study could be grouped into 38 different strains.
Distribution of enterotoxin genes.
All isolates were tested for the presence of enterotoxin genes
by employing two multiplex PCRs. Although
sei and
seg are encoded
on the same pathogenicity island, the enterotoxin gene cluster
egc, frequently only
sei or
seg was detected using the primer
pairs described previously (
26,
28). This effect may be caused
by the polymorphisms that were found in
egc and that impede
the annealing of some primers (
6). Indeed, an analysis of the
polymorphisms described and the primers used showed that some
strains harbor a one-base exchange in the 5' terminus of primer
"seg forward" as well as in the
sei primers. The design of new
primers led to a complete detection rate of
sei and
seg genes.
Seventeen strains (45%) did not carry any of the enterotoxin genes tested (Tables 1 and 2). For the enterotoxigenic strains, the seg/sei combination was found most frequently and was present in 14 strains (36%). Furthermore, nine strains (24%) were characterized by the enterotoxin B gene seb. The other enterotoxins were present in lower frequencies, ranging from 2.6% to 5.2% of the isolates; see and seh were not found (Fig. 1). If the enterotoxin gene cluster (egc) that carries seg and sei is counted as one enterotoxin locus, then 13 strains carried one enterotoxin-encoding locus, 6 strains were characterized by two loci, and 2 strains harbored three different enterotoxin loci.
Antibiotic resistance.
The antibiotic resistances of all 67 isolates were tested. The
isolates that belonged to single strains did not differ in their
susceptibilities. Eighteen percent of the strains did not show
any resistance, and the majority of the strains (31 strains
[82%]) were resistant to penicillin (Tables
1 and
2). Only a
few strains additionally showed resistance to other antibiotics,
i.e., erythromycin, gentamicin, netilmicin, mupirocin, and fusidic
acid. The percentage of multiply resistant strains was low (four
strains were resistant to two substances, and two single strains
were resistant to three and four agents, respectively). The
strain that was resistant to four agents, penicillin, fusidic
acid, mupirocin (MIC > 1,024 mg/liter), and erythromycin,
colonized both parents and the child and carried the enterotoxin
genes
seb and
egc. Methicillin-resistant
S. aureus or strains
showing intermediate vancomycin resistance were not detected.

DISCUSSION
Colonization of atopic patients with
S. aureus has been well
documented, and some older studies indicated colonization rates
well over 90% (
10,
24). In Bonn, only 66% of the patients were
found to be colonized with
S. aureus; however, this result corresponds
to other studies performed in the last years that detected between
57% and 64.2% of colonized patients (
16,
33,
39). It has been
shown that colonization with
S. aureus depends on the Th2 response
and that even anti-inflammatory treatment will reduce skin colonization
(
13), indicating that colonization is dependent on the severity
of the disease and that pretreatment with steroids or antibiotics
will inhibit the growth of
S. aureus. In contrast to other studies
(see, e.g., reference
27), the antibiotic and steroid treatments
had not been suspended before the samples were taken, which
may explain the rather low isolation rate.
The colonization rate for the parents (48%) was higher than that of the average population. For example, a study that elucidated the colonization rate of young menstruating women found only 26% colonization (31); in contrast, here, 57% of the mothers of atopic children were colonized. There may be multiple reasons for the high colonization rates of the parents: (i) the treatment of the infected lesions is normally carried out by the parents and offers excellent opportunities for transmission of the bacteria, (ii) there is close physical contact between parents and especially small children, and (iii) the parents of atopic children are often characterized by susceptibility to atopic disease as well and therefore may be prone to colonization by S. aureus. In this context, it is interesting that one father of our group still suffered from atopic eczema.
In order to investigate whether transmission within the families had taken place, the bacteria were typed. The PFGE, enterotoxin, and antibiotic resistance patterns showed that in the large majority of the families (84%), identical strains had been isolated from the child and his or her parent(s), indicating transmission within the family. In one case, the strain isolated from the skin of the child was identical to the strain that was present in the nose of the mother, whereas a different strain colonized the nose of the child itself. Even if the strains were not identical, related strains were often present within one family, indicating that strain transmission had taken place some time ago. For 73% of the patients, identical strains were obtained from nose and skin, and in 13% of the cases, related strains were present. This high frequency of identical and related strains is best explained by the fact that nasal carriage of S. aureus has been shown to be associated with hand carriage (32, 37), and the children may transfer the nose strains to their lesions in this way.
The production of enterotoxins by strains that colonize atopic patients has been well studied, but most analyses examined only the excretion of enterotoxins A, B, and C and toxic shock syndrome toxin 1 (41, 42). In most of those studies, seb was the most commonly found enterotoxin gene (42), and likewise, seb was one of the most frequently encountered enterotoxin genes seen in our strain collection; it was found in 9 of the 38 strains in this study.
However, the most frequently isolated enterotoxin genes were seg and sei, indicating the presence of the egc enterotoxin gene cluster. In 14 of 38 strains, both genes were detectable, giving an isolation rate of 37% for all strains or of 66% with regard to 21 enterotoxin-positive strains. Recent studies indicated that egc seems to be rather frequently found in animal isolates (25%) (36) and even more so in human isolates (55%) (4). Mempel et al. (27) previously tested for the presence of egc in isolates from patients with AD and also found the gene cluster in 48% of the isolates. Therefore, the frequency of egc in our isolates is not surprising.
In addition to enterotoxin I and enterotoxin G, egc often encodes the enterotoxin-like superantigens M, N, and O (sem-seo) (19) and sometimes enterotoxin U (22). It has been demonstrated that the egc enterotoxins are able to stimulate T-cell proliferation, and some cases of egc-mediated staphylococcal toxemias have been observed (18). However, although the enterotoxins of the egc gene cluster seem to be the most common staphylococcal enterotoxins, the serum levels of neutralizing antibodies against these toxins are lower than those against the classical enterotoxins (sea to sed) (15), and the toxins seem to be produced in lower quantities (29). The impact of these enterotoxins on AD remains to be evaluated.
It has been demonstrated that skin colonization with S. aureus is associated with an exacerbation of eczema in atopic disease, and therefore, current therapeutic approaches include anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial treatment in order to reduce or eliminate colonization (13, 14). Failure of treatment and recolonization of the skin may result from nasal carriage, antibiotic resistance of the strains, and contamination during treatment (11). The results demonstrate that the noses and/or skin of many children and their parents were colonized and indicate that intrafamiliar spread had occurred. In conclusion, it should be determined whether the children might benefit from a surveillance of the carrier status of their own noses and those of their family members in order to avoid intrafamiliar "ping pong" infections.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The assistance of Laura Maintz, Caroline Bussmann, and Tobias
Hagemann, members of the atopic disease consultancy of the Department
of Dermatology, University of Bonn, is gratefully acknowledged.
We thank Marion Oedenkoven for her introduction to the PFGE
technique.
This work was supported by the Bundesministerium für Wissenschaft und Forschung (PTJ-BIO031 13801F) and the Bonfor program of the Medical Faculty of the University Bonn.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institut für Medizinische Mikrobiologie, Immunologie und Parasitologie, Universitätsklinikum Bonn, Sigmund-Freud-Str. 25, D-53105 Bonn, Germany. Phone: (49) 228 287 19103. Fax: (49) 228 287 14808. E-mail:
Bierbaum{at}mibi03.meb.uni-bonn.de 
Published ahead of print on 12 December 2007. 

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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2008, p. 456-461, Vol. 46, No. 2
0095-1137/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.01734-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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