| Literature DB >> 27342074 |
Kedibone M Ndlangisa1,2, Mignon du Plessis3,4, Mushal Allam3, Nicole Wolter3,4, Thabo Mohale3,4, Linda de Gouveia3, Monica Birkhead5, Keith P Klugman6, Anne von Gottberg3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: More than 94 serotypes of Streptococcus pneumoniae have been described to date, however the majority of disease is caused by approximately 20 serotypes. Some pneumococci do not react with commercially available antisera used for serotyping and are thus regarded as non-serotypeable (NT). These pneumococci are commonly isolated during carriage studies and very rarely cause invasive disease. Colonization may occur with more than one serotype however disease with more than one serotype is rarely detected. Thus there are limited data describing cases of pneumococcal disease caused by more than one isolate.Entities:
Keywords: Mixed culture; Non-serotypeable; Pneumococcus; Serotype 1; Serotype 18C; South Africa; cpsE; wchA
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27342074 PMCID: PMC4921036 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-016-0745-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Characteristics of two patients (case A and B) with invasive Streptococcus pneumoniae serotypeable and non-serotypeable co-disease, South Africa
| Case A | Case B | |
|---|---|---|
| Age range in years | 10–14 | 10–14 |
| Gender | male | male |
| HIV status | unkown | unknown |
| Specimen | cerebrospinal fluid | blood |
| Year identified | 2009 | 2010 |
| Diagnosis | meningitis | unknown |
| Co-detected serotypes | non-serotypeable and serotype 1 | non-serotypeable and serotype 18C |
| Isolated serotypes | anon-serotypeable | non-serotypeable and 18C |
aPure culture for serotype 1 could not be obtained due to its low representation in the mixed culture (see Results for more information)
Fig. 1Visualization of pneumococcal isolates using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Capsular materials of non-serotypable pneumococcal isolates causing mixed infections in two patients in South Africa were compared to capsular materials of serotypeable isolates. The two cases were reported in 2009 (case A) and 2010 (case B). For case A non-serotypeable and a serotype 1 isolate were identified and for case B a non-serotypeable and 18C isolates were identified. TEM of the case A non-serotypeable isolate is shown in a, TEM of serotype 1 clinical isolate used as a control in b, TEMs of two non-serotypeable clinical isolates used as a controls in c and f, TEM of case B serotype 18C isolate in d, and case B non-serotypeable isolate in e. Scale bar = 175 nm
Fig. 2Schematic diagram representing capsular polysaccharide loci of a pneumococcal non-serotypeable and serotype 1 isolate. The schematic diagram represents comparison between the capsular polysaccharide (cps) locus of a non-serotypeable isolate (b) co-detected with a serotype 1 isolate during an invasive disease episode in South Africa, 2009, and the cps locus of an invasive serotype 1 clinical isolate from South Africa (a). Transposases are indicated by grey arrows and flanking repeated sequences by lines within the arrow delimitations