Literature DB >> 17392439

Association of the pneumococcal pilus with certain capsular serotypes but not with increased virulence.

Alan Basset1, Krzysztof Trzcinski, Christina Hermos, Katherine L O'Brien, Raymond Reid, Mathuram Santosham, Alexander J McAdam, Marc Lipsitch, Richard Malley.   

Abstract

The recent discovery of a mobile genetic element encoding a pilus-like structure in Streptococcus pneumoniae and the demonstration of a role for the pilus in virulence in mice have led to the proposal of the use of the pilus as a candidate pneumococcal vaccine. We examined the frequency of occurrence of the pneumococcal pilus, as determined by the presence of the rrgC gene, and analyzed its association with virulence, capsular serotypes, and multilocus sequence types in the American Indian pneumococcal collection and isolates of S. pneumoniae from blood cultures collected at Children's Hospital Boston. Overall, 21.4% of strains in the American Indian collection had the rrgC gene, but there was no difference between isolates obtained from the nasopharynx and those obtained from sterile sites (blood or cerebrospinal fluid). Vaccine-type strains were significantly more likely than non-vaccine-type strains to have this pilus gene (P < 0.001). Among isolates with identical multilocus sequence types, there was a high concordance (95%) between the multilocus sequence type and the presence or the absence of rrgC. Finally, in the era of the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, the frequency of rrgC in isolates from Children's Hospital Boston has decreased significantly (42.8% before 2000 versus 21.3% after 2000; P = 0.019). Therefore, our data show that the pilus is present in a minority of strains and is associated with certain serotypes and that its frequency has been reduced by the conjugate pneumococcal vaccine.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17392439      PMCID: PMC1933072          DOI: 10.1128/JCM.00265-07

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Microbiol        ISSN: 0095-1137            Impact factor:   5.948


  29 in total

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  41 in total

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Review 2.  Pili in Gram-positive bacteria: assembly, involvement in colonization and biofilm development.

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Review 4.  Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae interaction and response to pneumococcal vaccination: Myth or reality?

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6.  The Pneumococcal Type 1 Pilus Genes Are Thermoregulated and Are Repressed by a Member of the Snf2 Protein Family.

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7.  Infant Mouse Model for the Study of Shedding and Transmission during Streptococcus pneumoniae Monoinfection.

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8.  Re-emergence of the type 1 pilus among Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates in Massachusetts, USA.

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9.  Expression of the type 1 pneumococcal pilus is bistable and negatively regulated by the structural component RrgA.

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10.  Mutations in the gene encoding the ancillary pilin subunit of the Streptococcus suis srtF cluster result in pili formed by the major subunit only.

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