isolates of serotype 23F with intermediate penicillin resistance were recovered on seven occasions over a period of 37 months from a cystic fibrosis patient in Berlin. All isolates expressed the same multilocus sequence type (ST), ST10523. The genome sequences of the first and last isolates, D122 and D141, revealed the absence of two phage-related gene clusters compared to the genome of another ST10523 strain, D219, isolated earlier at a different place in Germany. Genomes of all three strains carried the same novel mosaic penicillin-binding protein (PBP) genes, , , and ; these genes were distinct from those of other penicillin-resistant strains except for of a Romanian isolate. All PBPs contained mutations that have been associated with the penicillin resistance phenotype. Most interestingly, a mosaic block identical to an internal sequence of ST10523 was present in of strain B93-4, which was isolated from the same patient. This suggests interspecies gene transfer from to within the host. Nearly all genes expressing surface proteins, which represent major virulence factors of and are typical for this species, were present in the genome of ST10523. One exception was the hyaluronidase gene , which contained a 12-nucleotide deletion within the promoter region and an internal stop codon. The lack of a functional hyaluronidase might contribute to the ability to persist in the host for an unusually long period of time. is a common resident in the human nasopharynx. However, carriage can result in severe diseases due to a unique repertoire of pathogenicity factors that are rare in closely related commensal streptococci. We investigated a penicillin-resistant clone of serotype 23F isolated from a cystic fibrosis patient on multiple occasions over an unusually long period of over 3 years that was present without causing disease. Genome comparisons revealed an apparent nonfunctional pneumococcus-specific gene encoding a hyaluronidase, supporting the view that this enzyme adds to the virulence potential of the bacterium. The 23F clone harbored unique mosaic genes encoding penicillin resistance determinants, the product of horizontal gene transfer involving the commensal as donor species. Sequences identical to one such mosaic gene were identified in an strain from the same patient, suggesting that in this case played the role of donor.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5463027 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00201-17 | DOI Listing |
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