Literature DB >> 22069659

Food poisoning and Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxins.

María Ángeles Argudín1, María Carmen Mendoza, María Rosario Rodicio.   

Abstract

Staphylococcus aureus produces a wide variety of toxins including staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEs; SEA to SEE, SEG to SEI, SER to SET) with demonstrated emetic activity, and staphylococcal-like (SEl) proteins, which are not emetic in a primate model (SElL and SElQ) or have yet to be tested (SElJ, SElK, SElM to SElP, SElU, SElU2 and SElV). SEs and SEls have been traditionally subdivided into classical (SEA to SEE) and new (SEG to SElU2) types. All possess superantigenic activity and are encoded by accessory genetic elements, including plasmids, prophages, pathogenicity islands, vSa genomic islands, or by genes located next to the staphylococcal cassette chromosome (SCC) implicated in methicillin resistance. SEs are a major cause of food poisoning, which typically occurs after ingestion of different foods, particularly processed meat and dairy products, contaminated with S. aureus by improper handling and subsequent storage at elevated temperatures. Symptoms are of rapid onset and include nausea and violent vomiting, with or without diarrhea. The illness is usually self-limiting and only occasionally it is severe enough to warrant hospitalization. SEA is the most common cause of staphylococcal food poisoning worldwide, but the involvement of other classical SEs has been also demonstrated. Of the new SE/SEls, only SEH have clearly been associated with food poisoning. However, genes encoding novel SEs as well as SEls with untested emetic activity are widely represented in S. aureus, and their role in pathogenesis may be underestimated.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Staphylococcus aureus; emetic activity; food poisoning; gene location; staphylococcal enterotoxins; superantigens

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2010        PMID: 22069659      PMCID: PMC3153270          DOI: 10.3390/toxins2071751

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Toxins (Basel)        ISSN: 2072-6651            Impact factor:   4.546


1. Staphylococcal Food Poisoning

Staphylococcal food poisoning (SFP) is an intoxication that results from the consumption of foods containing sufficient amounts of one (or more) preformed enterotoxin [1,2]. Symptoms of SFP have a rapid onset (2–8 h), and include nausea, violent vomiting, abdominal cramping, with or without diarrhea [3,4,5]. The disease is usually self-limiting and typically resolves within 24–48 h after onset. Occasionally it can be severe enough to warrant hospitalization, particularly when infants, elderly or debilitated people are concerned [4]. Food handlers carrying enterotoxin-producing S. aureus in their noses or on their hands are regarded as the main source of food contamination, via manual contact or through respiratory secretions. In fact, S. aureus is a common commensal of the skin and mucosal membranes of humans, with estimates of 20–30% for persistent and 60% for intermittent colonization [6]. Because S. aureus does not compete well with indigenous microbiota in raw foods, contamination is mainly associated with improper handling of cooked or processed foods, followed by storage under conditions which allow growth of S. aureus and production of the enterotoxin(s). However, S. aureus is also present in food animals, and dairy cattle, sheep and goats, particularly if affected by subclinical mastitis, are likely contaminants of milk [7]. Air, dust, and food contact surfaces can also serve as vehicles in the transfer of S. aureus to foods. Foods that have been frequently incriminated in staphylococcal intoxication include meat and meat products, poultry and egg products, milk and dairy products, salads, bakery products, particularly cream-filled pastries and cakes, and sandwich fillings [8,9]. Salted food products, such as ham, have also been implicated [10], according to the capacity of S. aureus to grow at relatively low water activity (aw = 0.86; [11]). SFP is a common disease whose real incidence is probably underestimated for a number of reasons, which include misdiagnosis, unreported minor outbreaks, improper sample collection and improper laboratory examination. The control of this disease is of social and economic importance. In fact, it represents a considerable burden in terms of loss of working days and productivity, hospital expenses, and economical losses in food industries, catering companies and restaurants [2,3,12,13,14,15].

2. Staphylococcus aureus Enterotoxins

The S. aureus enterotoxins (SEs) are potent gastrointestinal exotoxins synthesized by S. aureus throughout the logarithmic phase of growth or during the transition from the exponential to the stationary phase [16,17,18,19,20]. They are active in high nanogram to low microgram quantities [21], and are resistant to conditions (heat treatment, low pH) that easily destroy the bacteria that produce them, and to proteolytic enzymes, hence retaining their activity in the digestive tract after ingestion [22,23,24]. General properties of SEs and SEls and genomic location of the encoding genes. See text for references. nd, not determined; a Emetic activity demonstrated in rabbits (SElL; [43]) or in the small insectivore Suncus murinus (SElP; [39]) but not in a primate model; b Hypothetical location in a prophage [48].

2.1. Nomenclature

SEs belong to the broad family of pyrogenic toxin superantigens (SAgs; [3]). SAgs bypass conventional antigen recognition by interaction with major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules on the surface of antigen presenting cells, and with T-cell receptors (TCR) on specific T-cell subsets. Interaction typically occurs to the variable region of the TCR β chain (Vβ) but binding to the TCR Vα domain has been reported [21,25,29]. This leads to activation of a large number of T-cells followed by proliferation and massive release of chemokines and proinflammatory cytokines that may led to potentially lethal toxic shock syndrome [3]. However, staphylococcal enterotoxins have been proposed to be named according to their emetic activities [30]. Only SAgs that induce vomiting after oral administration in a primate model will be designated as SEs. Related toxins that lack emetic activity or have not been tested for it should be designated as staphylococcal enterotoxin-like (SEls) SAgs. Also, newly discovered toxins with more than 90% amino acid sequence identity with existing SEs or SEls should be designated as a numbered subtype. However, despite this consensus nomenclature some subtypes are still just called variants. At the time of this review, the repertoire of S. aureus SEs/SEls comprised 22 members, excluding molecular variants: (i) the classical SEA, SEB, SEC (with the SEC1, SEC2 and SEC3, SEC ovine and SEC bovine variants), SED and SEE, which were discovered in studies of S. aureus strains involved in SFP outbreaks, and classified in distinct serological types [31,32,33,34,35]; and (ii) the new types of SEs (SEG, SEH, SEI, SER, SES, SET) and SEls (SElJ, SElK, SElL, SElM, SElN, SElO, SElP, SElQ, SElU, SElU2, and SElV) [28,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45]. TSST-1, the toxic shock staphylococcal toxin, initially designated as SEF, lacks emetic activity [46,47].

2.2. Structure

SEs and SEls constitute a family of structurally related exoproteins that range in size from ~22 to 28 kDa (Table 1). Based on amino acid sequence comparisons, they have been distributed into four or five groups (Table 2), depending on the inclusion or not of SEH within group 1 [21,29,40,49]. The recently described SET is most related to a putative exotoxin from an S. aureus isolate involved in bovine mastitis, and to streptococcal pyrogenic toxin type K (SpeK) [40]. TSST-1, which is functionally a superantigen with no emetic activity, is more distant to SEs and SEls than to SSLs (staphylococcal superantigen-like proteins) [50]. The SSLs, first identified by screening staphylococcal genomes using two conserved amino acid motifs placed in the N-terminal and C-terminal domains of SAgs, are not mitogenic to T cells and do not bind MHC class II, although they display a wide array of activities targeting key elements of the innate and specific immunity, such as neutrophils, complement factor C5, and IgA [51,52,53,54,55,56].
Table 1

General properties of SEs and SEls and genomic location of the encoding genes. See text for references. nd, not determined; a Emetic activity demonstrated in rabbits (SElL; [43]) or in the small insectivore Suncus murinus (SElP; [39]) but not in a primate model; b Hypothetical location in a prophage [48].

ToxinMolecular Mass (kDa)Emetic ActivityCrystal Structure SolvedGeneAccessory genetic element
SEA27.1yesyesseaΦSa3ms, ΦSa3mw, Φ252B, ΦNM3, ΦMu50a
SEB28.4yesyessebpZA10, SaPI3
SEC27.5–27.6yesyessecSaPIn1, SaPIm1, SaPImw2, SaPIbov1
SED26.9yesyessedpIB485-like
SEE26.4yesnoseeΦSa b
SEG27.0yesyessegegc1 (vSaβ I); egc2 (vSaβ III); egc3; egc4
SEH25.1yesyessehMGEmw2/mssa476 seh/∆seo
SEI24.9weakyesseiegc1 (vSaβ I); egc2 (vSaβ III) ); egc3
SElJ28.5ndnoseljpIB485-like; pF5
SElK26.0ndyesselkΦSa3ms, ΦSa3mw, SaPI1, SaPI3, SaPIbov1, SaPI5
SElL26.0no anosellSaPIn1, SaPIm1, SaPImw2, SaPIbov1
SElM24.8ndnoselmegc1 (vSaβ I); egc2 (vSaβ III)
SElN26.1ndnoselnegc1 (vSaβ I); egc2 (vSaβ III); egc3; egc4
SElO26.7ndnoseloegc1 (vSaβ I); egc2 (vSaβ III); egc3; egc4; MGEmw2/mssa476 seh/∆seo
SElP27.0nd anoselpΦN315, ΦMu3A
SElQ25.0nonoselqΦSa3ms, ΦSa3mw, SaPI1, SaPI3, SaPI5
SER27.0yesnoserpIB485-like; pF5
SES26.2yesnosespF5
SET22.6weaknosetpF5
SElU27.1ndnoseluegc2 (vSaβ III); egc3
SElU2 (SEW)ndndnoselu2egc4
SElVndndnoselvegc4
Table 2

Grouping of SEs and SEls based on amino acid sequence comparisons. Modified from Larkin et al. [21]. Enterotoxins encoded by the egc cluster are shown in bold. SEH (in parenthesis) has been placed within Group 1 or Group 5, depending on the author [29,49].

GroupSEs and SEls
Group 1SEA, SED, SEE, (SEH), SElJ, SElN, SElO, SElP, SES
Group 2SEB, SEC, SEG, SER, SElU, SElU2
Group 3SEI, SElK, SElL, SElM, SElQ, SElV
Group 4SET
(Group 5)(SEH)
Grouping of SEs and SEls based on amino acid sequence comparisons. Modified from Larkin et al. [21]. Enterotoxins encoded by the egc cluster are shown in bold. SEH (in parenthesis) has been placed within Group 1 or Group 5, depending on the author [29,49]. The three-dimensional structures of TSST-1 [57,58] and several SEs and SEls [59,60,61,62,63,64,65,66,67,68,69] have been solved by crystallography (Table 1). The structures are remarkably conserved, although they interact differently with MHC class II molecules, and show different TCR specificity [70]. They are compact ellipsoidal proteins with two unequal domains separated by a shallow grove. The larger C-terminal domain is a β-grasp fold consisting of four- to five-strand β-sheet that packs against a highly conserved α-helix [71]. The smaller N-terminal domain consists of a mixed β-barrel with Greek-key topology, similar to the OB (oligosaccharide/oligonucleotide binding)-fold [72] also found in many other bacterial toxins (SSLs, streptococcal superantigens, nucleases and toxins of the AB5 family, including cholera and pertussis toxins, and verotoxin) [29,50]. The two domains are stabilized by close packing and by a section of the N-terminus that extends over the top of the C-terminal domain. The N-terminal extension contributes substantially to the TCR-binding site, located in the cleft between the two protein domains, while the MHC class II binding site is in the OB-fold [29,50]. The top of the N-terminal domain usually contains a highly flexible disulfide loop, which has been implicated with emetic activity (see below).

2.3. Mode of Action

Important efforts have been made to identify specific amino acids and domains within SEs which may be important for emesis, but results are still limited and controversial. Like TSST-1, SElL, and SElQ are nonemetic, while SEI displays weak emetic activity [38,41,42]. These toxins lack the disulfide loop characteristically found at the top of the N-terminal domain of other SEs. Nonetheless, the loop itself does not appear to be an absolute requirement for emesis, although it may stabilize a crucial conformation important for this activity [73]. Carboxymethylation of histidines on SEA or SEB generates proteins devoid of enterotoxicity, which still retain superantigenicity [75,76]. Analysis of the effects of carboxymethylation of each of the SEA histidines revealed that His61 is important for emesis, but not for T-cell proliferation [77]. Conversely, Leu48Gly and Phe44Ser mutant forms of SEA and SEB, respectively, do not bind MHC class II molecules or cause T-cell activation, but still provoke vomiting [78], hence separating emesis and superantigenicity as different functions of the proteins. Despite this, a high correlation exists between the two activities since, in most cases, genetic mutations resulting in a loss of superantigen activity also results in loss of emetic activity [78]. In contrast to the case of many other bacterial enterotoxins, specific cells and receptors in the digestive system have not been unequivocally linked to oral intoxication by a SE. It has been suggested that SEs stimulate the vagus nerve in the abdominal viscera, which transmits the signal to the vomiting center in the brain [79]. Supporting this idea, receptors on vagal afferent neurons are essential for SEA-triggered emesis [80], and capsaicin, a small molecular weight compound from chilli peppers that depletes peptidergic sensory nerve fibers, also diminishes SE effects in mammals [21]. In addition, SEs are able to penetrate the gut lining and activate local and systemic immune responses [81]. Release of inflammatory mediators (including histamine, leukotrienes, and neuroenteric peptide substance P) causes vomiting [82,83,84,85] and the emetic response can be eliminated by H2- and calcium channel-blockers, which also block the release of histamine [86]. Local immune system activation could also be responsible for the gastrointestinal damage associated with SE ingestion [87,88]. Inflammatory changes are observed in several regions of the gastrointestinal tract, but the most severe lesions appear in the stomach and the upper part of the small intestine [89]. The diarrhea sometimes associated with SEs intoxication may be due to the inhibition of water and electrolyte reabsorption in the small intestine [90,91]. In an attempt to link the two distinct activities of SEs, i.e., superantigenicity and enterotoxicity, it has been postulated that enterotoxin activity could facilitate transcitosis, enabling the toxin to enter the bloodstream and circulate through the body, thus allowing the interaction with antigen presenting- and T-cells that leads to superantigen activity [3,92]. In this way, circulation of SEs following ingestion of SEs as well as their spread from a S. aureus infection site, could have more profound effects upon the host versus if the toxin remains localized [21].

2.4. Enterotoxin Gene Location

All se and sel genes are located on accessory genetic elements, including plasmids, prophages, S. aureus pathogenicity islands (SaPIs), genomic island vSa, or next to the staphylococcal cassette chromosome (SCC) elements (Table 1). Most of these are mobile genetic elements, and their spread among S. aureus isolates can modify their ability to cause disease and contribute to the evolution of this important pathogen.

2.4.1. Plasmids

Plasmids have been long recognized as efficient vehicles for the spread of resistance and virulence determinants through horizontal gene transfer. In S. aureus, two kinds of plasmids carrying se/sel genes have been characterized (Table 1; Figure 1). Both contain sej and ser associated with either sed (pIB485-like) or with ses and set (pF5) [40,45,93].
Figure 1

Enterotoxin and enterotoxin-like genes in plasmids pIB485 and pF5 based on sequencing data deposited under the accession numbers indicated to the right of the figure. Note thatpIB485 also contains blaZ and cad resistance genes [94] and probably ser [40,95].

Enterotoxin and enterotoxin-like genes in plasmids pIB485 and pF5 based on sequencing data deposited under the accession numbers indicated to the right of the figure. Note thatpIB485 also contains blaZ and cad resistance genes [94] and probably ser [40,95]. The first plasmid described to carry an enterotoxin gene was pIB485, a 27.6 kilobase (kb) plasmid, in which first sed and latter selj were identified [45,94]. Enterotoxin SER was discovered by [93] in S. aureus strains associated with a food poisoning outbreak that occurred in Fukuoka City, Japan, in 1997, and the ser gene was shown to be located on a family of closely related plasmids, termed pF5 and pF5-like. These plasmids have similar restriction profiles and carry selj along with ser. More recently, two novel SE genes (ses and set) have also been detected on the Fukuoka plasmids [40,93]. Interestingly, the ser gene, together with sed and selj, has also been found in pIB485-like plasmids from laboratory strains, food poisoning outbreak isolates and healthy human isolates in Japan [93] and pIB485-like plasmids, varying in size and/or restriction profile were present in S. aureus isolates recovered in Spain from human nasal carriers and manually handled foods [95]. Two of them, named pUO-Sa-SED1 (~33 kb) and pUO-Sa-SED2 (~36 kb), carried sed, selj and ser, and have restriction patterns identical or similar to that of pIB485, while pUO-Sa-SED3 (53.5 kb; containing sed, selj and ser-like) has a different profile. A BLAST search (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) of the sed, selj, ser, ses and set genes revealed additional pIB485-like and pF5-like plasmids obtained from human clinical isolates, whose sequences have been deposited in databases. At present, the evolutionary relationship between the two types of plasmids is unknown.

2.4.2. Prophages

Like most published S. aureus phages, those carrying se genes (sea, selk, selp and selq) belong to the Siphoviridae family. The temperate, tailed bacteriophages within this family have been classified according to three features [96]: (i) the lysogeny module, particularly the integrase that dictates the insertion site of the phage in the bacterial chromosome; (ii) the serogroup, based on differences in capsid, tail, and tail appendix proteins; and (iii) the holin gene of the lysis module. The Siphoviridae prophages carrying se genes belong to integrase group Sa3, serogroups Fa and Fb, and holin groups 255a and 255b. Three se/sel genes (sea, selk and selq) are present together in ФSa3ms and ФSa3mw, while a single se/sel gene (sea or selp) is carried by other prophages (Table 1; Figure 2).
Figure 2

Enterotoxin genes carried by prophages based on sequencing data deposited under the accession numbers indicated to the right of the figure.

Apart from enterotoxins, virulence factors involved in evasion of the innate immunity are also encoded on these phages. These include the chemotaxis inhibitory protein (CHIP, product of the chp gene) that binds to host chemokine receptors, particularly the C5a receptor and the formylated peptide receptor, preventing neutrophil chemotaxis and activation [97]; the staphylococcal complement inhibitor (SCIN, encoded by the scn gene) that interferes with all pathways of complement activation by blocking C3 convertases [98]; the staphylokinase (product of the sak gene) that leads to degradation of two major opsonins (IgG and C3b) through activation of surface-bound plasminogen into plasmin, and also inhibits the bactericidal effect of α-defensins [99,100]. The region encoding these virulence factors is known as the "innate inmune evasion cluster" [101] and is located at one or both ends of the phages. Integration of these phages into the S. aureus chromosome occurs by a site-specific recombination event between the attP site in the phage genome and the attB site located within the β-hemolysin gene in the bacterial chromosome [102]. While integration negatively converts β-hemolysin expression, it supplies other virulence genes.

2.4.3. Staphylococcus aureus Pathogenicity Islands

The SaPIs are mobile pathogenicity islands, which are widely distributed in S. aureus and have also been found in other species of Staphylococcus. SaPIs have a highly conserved overall organization, parallel to that of typical temperate bateriophages. Each one occupies a specific chromosomal site (att), and always appears in the same orientation. From its integration site, the island can be induced to excise and replicate by one or more specific staphylococcal helper phages [103,104]. Following replication the SaPI DNA is efficiently encapsidated into infectious small-headed phage-like particles resulting in extremely high transfer frequencies. Enterotoxin genes carried by prophages based on sequencing data deposited under the accession numbers indicated to the right of the figure. Staphylococcus aureus pathogenicity islands (SaPIs) carrying enterotoxin or enterotoxin-like genes. Modified from Novick and Subedi [105] and based on the accession numbers indicated to the right of the figure. SaPIs are very common in S. aureus (Table 1). They range in size from 15–17 kb, with the exceptions of SaPIbov2 (27 kb) and a highly degenerated SaPI (3.14 kb) present in some sequenced genomes. The complete nucleotide sequence is known for 20 SaPIs, and some of them carry genes encoding TSST-1 and/or one or more SEs (Figure 3). For instance, tst is found together with selk and selq in SaPI1, with sec3 and sell in SaPIm1 and SaPIn1, and with sell and sec in SaPIbov1; seb, selq and selk have been reported in SaPI3; selk and selq in SaPI5; and sec4 and sell2 in SaPImw2 [105]. Induction of a SaPI is likely to originate an increase in the copy number of the toxin genes, and therefore to an increase in toxin production, as described for lysogenic phages [106].
Figure 3

Staphylococcus aureus pathogenicity islands (SaPIs) carrying enterotoxin or enterotoxin-like genes. Modified from Novick and Subedi [105] and based on the accession numbers indicated to the right of the figure.

2.4.4. vSa Genomic Islands

The term vSa refers to non-phage and non-SCC genomic islands that are exclusively present in S. aureus, often (but not always) encode virulence determinants, are inserted at specific loci in the chromosome and are associated with either intact or remnant DNA recombinases [107,108]. Two major vSa genomic islands, namely vSaα and vSaβ, each of about 20–30 kb, are present in all S. aureus genomes sequenced so far, but absent in other Staphylococcus species, including S. epidermidis. Though vSaα and vSaβ could have been acquired by horizontal gene transfer, actually there is not evidence that they can move. Each of these islands carries two copies of the genes encoding the recognition (hsdS) and methylation (hsdM) subunits of the Sau1 type I restriction-modification system. A single copy of the gene for the restriction subunit is located elsewhere in the S. aureus chromosome [109]. The hsdS genes of the Sau1 system diverge significantly between members of different lineages and this determines variations in the sequences that will be specifically recognized as targets for modification through methylation. Since only modified sequences will be protected against restriction, exchange of DNA between members of same lineage will be allowed, while DNA transferred between isolates of different lineages will be digested. Because of this, the Sau1 system has been considered as a key factor in the control of lineage evolution. Structure of two types of the vSaβ genomic island containing the enterotoxin gene cluster. Adapted from Baba et al. [108] and based on accession numbers indicated to the right of the figure. Both vSaα and vSaβ contain clusters of genes encoding known or putative virulence factors. vSaα carries a cluster of lipoprotein-encoding genes (lpl cluster), and the set (staphylococcal exotoxin-like) cluster [55,110], later re-named as the ssl (staphylococcal superantigen-like) cluster [30]. The ssl cluster consists of a series of related genes (between 7 and 11) coding for proteins that share a common architecture with SAgs but do not function as such [50]. However, they have alternative effects on the host immune system, acting on IgA, complement factor C5 (as demonstrated for SSL7; [53]), or neutrophils (SSL5 [111] and SSL11 [52]). vSaβ carries a serine protease gene (spl) cluster, genes for the components of the LukED leukocidin (lukD and lukE), genes for lantibiotic biosynthesis (bsa) and/or the enterotoxin gene cluster (egc), which includes a variable number of se/sel genes forming an operon [36]. Two representative types of vSaβ, the genomic island carrying se genes, are showed in Figure 4.
Figure 4

Structure of two types of the vSaβ genomic island containing the enterotoxin gene cluster. Adapted from Baba et al. [108] and based on accession numbers indicated to the right of the figure.

It has been suggested that the egc cluster arose from an ancestral se gene, through tandem duplication and further variation, while gene recombination has created variant toxins with different biological activities [28,36,112]. The dynamic evolution of this cluster that has been considered as a nursery of se/sel genes [36] is reflected in the number of variants already known (Figure 5).
Figure 5

Structure of egc clusters. Modified from Thomas et al [28] and Collery et al. [114], and based on the accession numbers indicated to the right of the figure.

Structure of egc clusters. Modified from Thomas et al [28] and Collery et al. [114], and based on the accession numbers indicated to the right of the figure. The first egc (egc1) was discovered in 2001 and consists of two SE genes (seg and sei), three SEl genes (selm, seln and selo), and two pseudogenes (φent1 and φent2) [36,113]. Afterward, a second egc variant (egc2) containing an additional SEl gene (selu) was described [37]. The latter gene has been generated by fusion of the two egc1 pseudogenes, due to a 15 nucleotide insertion in φent1 and a single adenine deletion that abolishes a stop codon within the same gene. In addition, allelic variants of each of the egc2 genes compose the egc3 cluster [37,114,115], and a new selu variant (selu2) and a novel sel gene (selv) are present in egc4 [28]. A recombination event between selm and sei produced selv, while deletion of one adenine between the overlapping 5’ and 3’ ends of the φent2 and φent1 pseudogenes generated selu2 (which was proposed to be renamed as selw) [116]. Incomplete egc clusters, lacking one or more genes of the classical egc1, as well as variants carrying insertion sequences within seln, seg or sei, have also been described [28,117]. These structures have been considered as evolutionary intermediates of the egc cluster [28]. Moreover, the fact that each of the three major homology groups of SEs/SEs (Table 2) contains enterotoxins encoded by genes of the egc operon led to the proposal that all se/sels originated from the egc cluster [29].

2.4.5. Enterotoxin Genes in the Proximity of the Staphylococcal Cassette Chromosome

The seh gene, flanked by a truncated selo gene and a putative transposase gene, have been found in close proximity of the non-mecA containing SCC element harbored by MSSA (methicillin susceptible S. aureus) strain 476; the SCCmec type IV of S. aureus MW2; and the SCCmec type IV of a collection of highly related community-associated S. aureus ([118]; Figure 6). In the latter strains, acquisition of the seh element could have stabilized the integration of SCCmec type IV, which is unable to excise [118].
Figure 6

Comparison of two allelic forms of SCC elements associated with seh. Modified from Noto and Archer [118] and based on the accession numbers indicated to the right of the figure.

Comparison of two allelic forms of SCC elements associated with seh. Modified from Noto and Archer [118] and based on the accession numbers indicated to the right of the figure.

2.5. Staphylococcal Enterotoxins and Food Poisoning Outbreaks

Independently of their origin, enterotoxigenic S. aureus often differ in the number of mobile genetic elements and se/sel genes therein, as well as in the enterotoxins they produce. SEA, either alone or together with other SEs/SEls, is the enterotoxin most commonly reported in foods, and is also considered as the main cause of SFP, probably due to its extraordinarily high resistance to proteolytic enzymes [3,119,120]. The predominance of SEA is well documented in different countries. As relevant examples: (i) a comprehensive study of 359 outbreaks that occurred in the United Kingdom (UK) between 1969 and 1990 revealed that 79% of the S. aureus strains produced SEA [121]. Meat, poultry and their products, particularly ham and chicken, were the vehicle in 75% of the incidents. SEA was detected alone in 56.9% of the outbreaks and, in conjunction with SED, SEB, SEC or SEB and SED in a lower number of outbreaks (15.4, 3.4, 2.5 or 1.1%, respectively); (ii) SEA was also the enterotoxin most frequently found among 31 SFP outbreaks in France (69.7%), which were associated with a great variety of foods including milk products, different types of meat, and salads, between 1981 and 2002 [122]. In agreement with this, sea was the most common gene in the isolates tested, followed by sed, seg, sei and she; (iii) In Austria, an SFP outbreak that affected 40 children in 2007 was attributed to S. aureus isolates producing SEA and SED. Bovine milk products were identified as the source of the outbreak, and the cows, not the dairy owner, were the more likely reservoir of the SEs-producing S. aureus [123]; (iv) SEA was also the most common enterotoxin recovered from food poisoning outbreaks in USA (77.8% of all outbreaks) followed by SED and SEB [124]; (v) A study of S. aureus obtained from dairy products, responsible for 16 outbreaks in Brazil revealed that the most frequently encountered enterotoxin gene was sea followed by seb [125]. Finally, (vi) several studies have investigated the distribution of SEs and se/sel genes in S. aureus from foods and SFP outbreaks in Asian countries. Among strains recovered from patients associated with SFP outbreaks during 2001-2003 in Taiwan, sea was the most common gene, followed by seb and sec [13]. In Korea, about 90% of food poisoning isolates were reported to contain the sea gene [126]. SEA also was the most common SE associated to SFP in Japan [127]. In this country, an extensive outbreak that occurred in 2000 was attributed to low-fat milk containing SEA [128], while a recent outbreak (2009) was due to crepes containing SEA and SEC [129]. SEB, SEC or SED alone have been also implicated in SFP outbreaks through the world [121,122,125]. Interestingly, an outbreak, which affected three members of the same family in USA, was caused by coleslaw-containing SEC produced by a community-acquired methicillin resistant S. aureus from an asymptomatic food handler [130]. The fifth classical enterotoxin, SEE, has been infrequently reported in foods and food-producing animals, and its involvement in SFP outbreaks has only been demonstrated in rare occasions. However, six SFP outbreaks, which occurred in France at the end of 2009, were caused by SEE present in soft cheese made from unpasteurized milk. This enterotoxin has also been associated with outbreaks in USA and UK [33,121,131,132,133]. In contrast to classical SEs, the relationship between the novel SEs/SEls and SFP is not fully understood. Among them, SEG, SEH and SEI, SER, SES, and SET have shown to be emetic after oral administration in a primate model, while the emetic activity of SElL and SElP has only been demonstrated in rabbits and the small insectivore Suncus murinus, respectively [39,43]. The remaining SEls either lack emetic properties (SElQ), or have not been tested (SElJ, SElK, SElM, SElN, SElO, SElU, SElU2 and SElV). Moreover, commercial kits are not available for immunological detection of these SEs and SEls, although ELISA (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) has been described for SEH [134] and for SEG and SEI [135]. Of the new enterotoxins, only SEH-producing strains have clearly been involved in SFP outbreaks [134,136,137,138], but results from different researchers have shown the high incidence of genes encoding new SEs and SEls among food-borne S. aureus [131,139,140,141]. Mc Lauchlin et al. [131] revealed that 23 staphylococcal strains implicated in SFP outbreaks in UK, in which classical se genes were not detected, harbored one or more of the new se/sel genes, i.e., seg, seh, sei or selj. It is possible that the corresponding SEs might have been the cause of these outbreaks. The presence of egc genes was also shown in food-associated S. aureus from other countries [131,140,141,142,143,144], and newly described SE or SEl genes, particularly those belonging to the egc cluster, were more frequently detected in S. aureus strains isolated from raw pork and chicken meat in Korea than genes encoding classical SEs [145]. Despite this, egc-encoded SEs or SEls have not yet been directly implied in typical cases of SFP, although SEG and SEI have been reported as the cause of chronic diarrhea associated with severe but reversible enteropathy in two malnourished neonates [146].

3. Conclusions

SEs and SEls produced by S. aureus belong to the fascinating family of superantigens, which sabotage the immune system of the host by targeting the innate and adaptive responses. Members of the family are well characterized with regard to superantigenic activity. However, the bases for the enterotoxigenic activity associated with a number of S. aureus superantigens remain elusive. Likewise, a direct relationship of S. aureus SEs (with demonstrated emetic activity) and SEls (which lack emetic activity or have yet to be tested) with pathogenicity has not always been established, and the reasons for the redundancy of se/sel genes within the same bacterium deserve further attention. Of particular interest is the egc cluster, regarded as a nursery of se/sel genes in continuing evolution. The cluster and its multiple variants, located on the νSaβ genomic island, are widely distributed in S. aureus of any origin, and results from our group indicate that they are the most common superantigenes in S. aureus recovered from clinical samples, healthy carriers, cows with subclinical mastitis and foods [143,147,148,149]. However, a direct involvement of egc-encoded SEs in food poisoning has not been demonstrated, and attempts to elucidate their pathogenic role are still scarce [146,150,151,152]. In summary, although a wealth of information on SEs and SEls is already available, they still represent an active field of research, which will certainly provide new exciting findings in forthcoming years.
  143 in total

1.  A study of the enterotoxigenicity of coagulase-negative and coagulase-positive staphylococcal isolates from food poisoning outbreaks in Minas Gerais, Brazil.

Authors:  Jamaira Fereira Veras; Luiz Simeão do Carmo; Lawrence C Tong; Jeffrey W Shupp; Christiano Cummings; Deise Aparecida Dos Santos; Mônica Maria Oliveira Pinho Cerqueira; Alvaro Cantini; Jacques Robert Nicoli; Marti Jett
Journal:  Int J Infect Dis       Date:  2008-02-21       Impact factor: 3.623

2.  Outbreak of staphylococcal food intoxication after consumption of pasteurized milk products, June 2007, Austria.

Authors:  Daniela Schmid; Rainer Fretz; Petra Winter; Michaela Mann; Gerda Höger; Anna Stöger; Werner Ruppitsch; Johann Ladstätter; Norbert Mayer; Alfred de Martin; Franz Allerberger
Journal:  Wien Klin Wochenschr       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 1.704

Review 3.  The bacterial superantigen and superantigen-like proteins.

Authors:  John D Fraser; Thomas Proft
Journal:  Immunol Rev       Date:  2008-10       Impact factor: 12.988

4.  Crystal structures of the staphylococcal toxin SSL5 in complex with sialyl Lewis X reveal a conserved binding site that shares common features with viral and bacterial sialic acid binding proteins.

Authors:  Heather M Baker; Indira Basu; Matthew C Chung; Tom Caradoc-Davies; John D Fraser; Edward N Baker
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  2007-10-10       Impact factor: 5.469

5.  Associations between enterotoxin gene cluster types egc1, egc2 and egc3, agr types, enterotoxin and enterotoxin-like gene profiles, and molecular typing characteristics of human nasal carriage and animal isolates of Staphylococcus aureus.

Authors:  Mark M Collery; Davida S Smyth; John J G Tumilty; Jane M Twohig; Cyril J Smyth
Journal:  J Med Microbiol       Date:  2009-01       Impact factor: 2.472

6.  Genome sequence of Staphylococcus aureus strain Newman and comparative analysis of staphylococcal genomes: polymorphism and evolution of two major pathogenicity islands.

Authors:  Tadashi Baba; Taeok Bae; Olaf Schneewind; Fumihiko Takeuchi; Keiichi Hiramatsu
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2007-10-19       Impact factor: 3.490

7.  Staphylococcal enterotoxins G and I, a cause of severe but reversible neonatal enteropathy.

Authors:  Sandhia Naik; Fabienne Smith; John Ho; Nicholas M Croft; Paola Domizio; Elisabeth Price; Ian R Sanderson; Nigel J Meadows
Journal:  Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2007-12-11       Impact factor: 11.382

8.  PCR detection of Staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEs) N, O, P, Q, R, U, and survey of SE types in Staphylococcus aureus isolates from food-poisoning cases in Taiwan.

Authors:  Yu-Cheng Chiang; Wan-Wen Liao; Chin-Ming Fan; Wan-Yu Pai; Chien-Shun Chiou; Hau-Yang Tsen
Journal:  Int J Food Microbiol       Date:  2007-11-01       Impact factor: 5.277

9.  Identification and characterization of two novel staphylococcal enterotoxins, types S and T.

Authors:  Hisaya K Ono; Katsuhiko Omoe; Ken'ichi Imanishi; Yoshihiro Iwakabe; Dong-Liang Hu; Hidehito Kato; Naoyuki Saito; Akio Nakane; Takehiko Uchiyama; Kunihiro Shinagawa
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2008-08-18       Impact factor: 3.441

10.  The crystal structure of staphylococcal superantigen-like protein 11 in complex with sialyl Lewis X reveals the mechanism for cell binding and immune inhibition.

Authors:  Matthew C Chung; Bruce D Wines; Heather Baker; Ries J Langley; Edward N Baker; John D Fraser
Journal:  Mol Microbiol       Date:  2007-12       Impact factor: 3.501

View more
  165 in total

1.  Superantigens of Staphylococcus aureus from patients with diabetic foot ulcers.

Authors:  Bao G Vu; Christopher S Stach; Wilmara Salgado-Pabón; Daniel J Diekema; Sue E Gardner; Patrick M Schlievert
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2014-06-20       Impact factor: 5.226

2.  Characterisation of mecA gene negative Staphylococcus aureus isolated from bovine mastitis milk from Northern Germany.

Authors:  O H Sheet; N T Grabowski; G Klein; F Reich; A Abdulmawjood
Journal:  Folia Microbiol (Praha)       Date:  2019-03-19       Impact factor: 2.099

3.  Molecular epidemiology and identification of a Staphylococcus aureus clone causing food poisoning outbreaks in Japan.

Authors:  Yusuke Sato'o; Katsuhiko Omoe; Ikunori Naito; Hisaya K Ono; Akio Nakane; Motoyuki Sugai; Norio Yamagishi; Dong-Liang Hu
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2014-04-23       Impact factor: 5.948

4.  New antibacterial-core structures based on styryl quinolinium.

Authors:  Eunsuk Kim; Seung-Heon Lee; Seung-Jun Lee; O-Pil Kwon; Hyunjin Yoon
Journal:  Food Sci Biotechnol       Date:  2017-04-30       Impact factor: 2.391

Review 5.  Virulence Factor Targeting of the Bacterial Pathogen Staphylococcus aureus for Vaccine and Therapeutics.

Authors:  Trevor L Kane; Katelyn E Carothers; Shaun W Lee
Journal:  Curr Drug Targets       Date:  2018       Impact factor: 3.465

6.  A single-stranded DNA aptamer that selectively binds to Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin B.

Authors:  Jeffrey A DeGrasse
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-03-16       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Anti-Staphylococcal Enterotoxinogenesis of Lactococcus lactis in Algerian Raw Milk Cheese.

Authors:  Fatiha Tetili; Farida Bendali; Josette Perrier; Djamila Sadoun
Journal:  Food Technol Biotechnol       Date:  2017-12       Impact factor: 3.918

8.  High prevalence of methicillin resistant and enterotoxin gene-positive Staphylococcus aureus among nasally colonized food handlers in central Iran.

Authors:  Saeed Fooladvand; Hossein Sarmadian; Danial Habibi; Alex van Belkum; Ehsanollah Ghaznavi-Rad
Journal:  Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis       Date:  2018-10-23       Impact factor: 3.267

9.  Characterisation of the Virulence Factors and Genetic Types of Methicillin Susceptible Staphylococcus aureus from Patients and Healthy Individuals.

Authors:  King-Ting Lim; Yasmin Abu Hanifah; Mohd Yasim Mohd Yusof; Kwai-Lin Thong
Journal:  Indian J Microbiol       Date:  2012-06-20       Impact factor: 2.461

10.  Transcriptomic and metabolic responses of Staphylococcus aureus in mixed culture with Lactobacillus plantarum, Streptococcus thermophilus and Enterococcus durans in milk.

Authors:  Kamila Zdenkova; Babek Alibayov; Ludmila Karamonova; Sabina Purkrtova; Renata Karpiskova; Katerina Demnerova
Journal:  J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol       Date:  2016-06-24       Impact factor: 3.346

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.