is an important cause of mucosal and invasive infections and a common colonizer of the upper respiratory tract. As there are no recent data on carriage in Portugal, we aimed to characterize carriage samples and investigate possible parallelisms with disease isolates. Between 2016-2019, 1524 nasopharyngeal samples were obtained from children (0-6 years) attending day-care. were serotyped and screened for β-lactamase production. Strains producing β-lactamase and/or those that were encapsulated were further characterized by antibiotype; encapsulated strains were also investigated for MLST and the presence of antimicrobial resistance and virulence genes (extracted from whole genome sequencing). The overall carriage rate was 84.1%. Most isolates (96.7%) were nonencapsulated. Encapsulated strains were of serotypes f (1.8%), e (1.1%), a (0.3%), and b (0.1%). MLST showed clonality within serotypes. Although the lineages were the same as those that were described among disease isolates, colonization isolates had fewer virulence determinants. Overall, 7.5% of the isolates were β-lactamase positive; one isolate had , which has not been previously described in . A single isolate, which was identified as , had an incomplete f-like cap locus. In conclusion, circulation of serotype b is residual. The few encapsulated strains are genetically related to disease-causing isolates. Thus, surveillance of carriage should be maintained.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9611606 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms10101964 | DOI Listing |
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