| Literature DB >> 32014891 |
Luis Alberto Vega1, Misu A Sanson1, Brittany J Shah1, Anthony R Flores2,3.
Abstract
Streptococcus pyogenes (group A Streptococcus [GAS]) is a human pathogen responsible for a wide range of diseases. Asymptomatic carriage of GAS in the human pharynx is commonplace and a potential reservoir for GAS transmission. Early studies showed that GAS transmission correlated with high bacterial burdens during the acute symptomatic phase of the disease. Human studies and the nonhuman primate model are generally impractical for investigation of the bacterial mechanisms contributing to GAS transmission and persistence. To address this gap, we adapted an infant mouse model of pneumococcal colonization and transmission to investigate factors that influence GAS transmission and persistence. The model recapitulated the direct correlation between GAS burden and transmission during the acute phase of infection observed in humans and nonhuman primates. Furthermore, our results indicate that the ratio of colonized to uncolonized hosts influences the rates of GAS transmission and persistence. We used the model to test the hypothesis that capsule production influences GAS transmission and persistence in a strain-dependent manner. We detected significant differences in rates of transmission and persistence between capsule-positive (emm3) and capsule-negative (emm87) GAS strains. Capsule was associated with higher levels of GAS shedding, independent of the strain background. In contrast to the capsule-positive emm3 strain, restoring capsule production in emm87 GAS did not increase transmissibility, and the absence of capsule enhanced persistence only in the capsule-negative (emm87) strain background. These data suggest that strain background (capsule positive versus capsule negative) influences the effect of capsule in GAS transmission and persistence and that as-yet-undefined factors are required for the transmission of capsule-negative emm types.Entities:
Keywords: capsule; group A Streptococcuszzm321990; mouse; nasopharyngeal colonization; persistence; transmission
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32014891 PMCID: PMC7093130 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00709-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Immun ISSN: 0019-9567 Impact factor: 3.441