At the end of 2022 into early 2023, the UK Health Security Agency reported unusually high levels of scarlet fever and invasive disease caused by (StrepA or group A ). During this time, we collected and genome-sequenced 341 non-invasive throat and skin isolates identified during routine clinical diagnostic testing in Sheffield, a large UK city. We compared the data with that obtained from a similar collection of 165 isolates from 2016 to 2017. Numbers of throat-associated isolates collected peaked in early December 2022, reflecting the national scarlet fever upsurge, while skin infections peaked later in December. The most common -types in 2022-2023 were 1 (28.7 %), 12 (24.9 %) and 22 (7.7 %) in throat and 1 (22 %), 12 (10 %), 76 (18 %) and 49 (7 %) in skin. While all 1 isolates were the M1 lineage, the comparison with 2016-2017 revealed diverse lineages in other -types, including 12, and emergent lineages within other types including a new acapsular 75 lineage, demonstrating that the upsurge was not completely driven by a single genotype. The analysis of the capsule locus predicted that only 51 % of throat isolates would produce capsule compared with 78% of skin isolates. Ninety per cent of throat isolates were also predicted to have high NADase and streptolysin O (SLO) expression, based on the promoter sequence, compared with only 56% of skin isolates. Our study has highlighted the value in analysis of non-invasive isolates to characterize tissue tropisms, as well as changing strain diversity and emerging genomic features which may have implications for spillover into invasive disease and future upsurges.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11318961 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.001277 | DOI Listing |
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