AI Article Synopsis

  • - Staphylococcus saprophyticus is a leading cause of urinary tract infections (UTIs) in young women, yet its molecular epidemiology remains poorly understood.
  • - A study analyzed 321 S. saprophyticus isolates from global human UTIs and 232 from the pig-processing chain, revealing that the meat-production chain is a significant source of these infections.
  • - The research identified two distinct lineages of pathogenic S. saprophyticus that are linked to antimicrobial resistance and potential new virulence factors, shedding light on the bacteria's origin and transmission.

Article Abstract

Staphylococcus saprophyticus is a primary cause of community-acquired urinary tract infections (UTIs) in young women. S. saprophyticus colonizes humans and animals but basic features of its molecular epidemiology are undetermined. We conducted a phylogenomic analysis of 321 S. saprophyticus isolates collected from human UTIs worldwide during 1997-2017 and 232 isolates from human UTIs and the pig-processing chain in a confined region during 2016-2017. We found epidemiologic and genomic evidence that the meat-production chain is a major source of S. saprophyticus causing human UTIs; human microbiota is another possible origin. Pathogenic S. saprophyticus belonged to 2 lineages with distinctive genetic features that are globally and locally disseminated. Pangenome-wide approaches identified a strong association between pathogenicity and antimicrobial resistance, phages, platelet binding proteins, and an increased recombination rate. Our study provides insight into the origin, transmission, and population structure of pathogenic S. saprophyticus and identifies putative new virulence factors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7920669PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid2703.200852DOI Listing

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