Streptococcus (S.) pyogenes is well recognized as the most common pathogen causing pharyngotonsillitis in school-age children. In Japan, mucoid Streptococcus pneumoniae is well known as a causative agent of severe acute otitis media (AOM); however, mucoid S. pyogenes has rarely been reported. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of an AOM patient caused by mucoid S. pyogenes in Japan. A 36-year-old previously healthy female was referred to our hospital with suspicion of cerebrospinal otorrhea due to increasing otalgia accompanied by headache following myringotomy. Bacterial cultures of middle ear secretions were performed, and mucoid-form colonies surrounded by zones of complete β-hemolysis were produced on sheep's blood agar. Antigen-agglutination test results were positive for S. pyogenes, and thus the patient received treatment with panipenem-betamipron 2.0 g/day for 10 days, which resolved nearly all symptoms. The bacteriological features of this strain were then investigated. The M-protein genotype encoded by the emm gene, the major virulence factor of S. pyogenes, was determined to be emm75. Generally, S. pyogenes forms colonies having non-mucoid matt appearances based on β-hemolysis of sheep's blood agar. The mucoid phenotype results from abundant production of hyaluronic acid capsular polysaccharide, a key virulence determinant. emm75 is common in noninvasive, but less common in invasive disease. In conclusion, mucoid S. pyogenes can cause severe infection even in previously healthy persons. Emergence of mucoid S. pyogenes and drug resistance trends should be monitored in the future.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1620/tjem.232.301 | DOI Listing |
Enferm Infecc Microbiol Clin (Engl Ed)
August 2022
Unidad de Gestión Clínica de Microbiología, Hospital Universitario Reina Sofía, Córdoba, Spain; Instituto Maimónides de Investigación Biomédica de Córdoba, Córdoba, Spain; Departamento de Química Agrícola, Edafología y Microbiología, Universidad de Córdoba, Córdoba, Spain.
Introduction: The objective of this study is to characterize Streptococcus pyogenes isolates with a mucoid phenotype and to compare them with non-mucoid isolates obtained between April and August 2016.
Material And Methods: Identification and antimicrobial susceptibility were performed in all isolates. The emm type and exotoxin genes speA, speB, speC, speF, speG, speH, speJ, speZ and ssa were analyzed.
Enferm Infecc Microbiol Clin (Engl Ed)
February 2021
Unidad de Gestión Clínica de Microbiología, Hospital Universitario Reina Sofía, Córdoba, España; Instituto Maimónides de Investigación Biomédica de Córdoba, Córdoba, España; Departamento de Química Agrícola, Edafología y Microbiología, Universidad de Córdoba, Córdoba, España.
Introduction: The objective of this study is to characterize Streptococcus pyogenes isolates with a mucoid phenotype and to compare them with non-mucoid isolates obtained between April and August 2016.
Material And Methods: Identification and antimicrobial susceptibility were performed in all isolates. The emm type and exotoxin genes speA, speB, speC, speF, speG, speH, speJ, speZ and ssa were analyzed.
J Infect Chemother
April 2021
Department of Infection Control and Immunology, Omura Satoshi Memorial Institute and Graduate School of Infection Control Sciences, Kitasato University, 5-9-1 Shirokane, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108-8641, Japan. Electronic address:
Introduction: Mucoid (MTB313) and nonmucoid (MTB314) strains of group A streptococcus (GAS) emm (antiphagocytic M protein) type 1 were simultaneously isolated from a single patient suffering from streptococcal meningitis. In a CD46-expressing transgenic (CD46 Tg) mouse model of subcutaneous infection into both hind footpads with MTB313 or MTB314, MTB313 showed considerably higher virulence than MTB314.
Methods: The comparative genomic analysis based on the whole-genome sequencing revealed that MTB313 possessed an amber codon within rocA (sensory transduction protein kinase), but MTB314 did not carry this stop codon.
Microbiol Spectr
January 2019
Division of Infectious Diseases, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Most clinical isolates of elaborate a capsular polysaccharide, which is composed of hyaluronic acid, a high-molecular-mass polymer of alternating residues of -acetyl glucosamine and glucuronic acid. Certain strains, particularly those of the M18 serotype, produce abundant amounts of capsule, resulting in formation of large, wet-appearing, translucent or "mucoid" colonies on solid media, whereas strains of M-types 4 and 22 produce none. Studies of acapsular mutant strains have provided evidence that the capsule enhances virulence in animal models of infection, an effect attributable, at least in part, to resistance to complement-mediated opsonophagocytic killing by leukocytes.
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