Genomic analysis of global Staphylococcus argenteus strains reveals distinct lineages with differing virulence and antibiotic resistance gene content
Goswami, Cosmika and Fox, Stephen and Holden, Matthew and Leanord, Alistair and Evans, Thomas J. (2021) Genomic analysis of global Staphylococcus argenteus strains reveals distinct lineages with differing virulence and antibiotic resistance gene content. Frontiers in Microbiology, 12. 795173. ISSN 1664-302X (https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.795173)
Preview |
Text.
Filename: Goswami-etal-FM-2021-Genomic-analysis-of-global-Staphylococcus-argenteus-strains.pdf
Final Published Version License: ![]() Download (12MB)| Preview |
Abstract
Infections due to Staphylococcus argenteus have been increasingly reported worldwide and the microbe cannot be distinguished from Staphylococcus aureus by standard methods. Its complement of virulence determinants and antibiotic resistance genes remain unclear, and how far these are distinct from those produced by S. aureus remains undetermined. In order to address these uncertainties, we have collected 132 publicly available sequences from fourteen different countries, including the United Kingdom, between 2005 and 2018 to study the global genetic structure of the population. We have compared the genomes for antibiotic resistance genes, virulence determinants and mobile genetic elements such as phages, pathogenicity islands and presence of plasmid groups between different clades. 20% (n = 26) isolates were methicillin resistant harboring a mecA gene and 88% were penicillin resistant, harboring the blaZ gene. ST2250 was identified as the most frequent strain, but ST1223, which was the second largest group, contained a marginally larger number of virulence genes compared to the other STs. Novel S. argenteus pathogenicity islands were identified in our isolates harboring tsst-1, seb, sec3, ear, selk, selq toxin genes, as well as chromosomal clusters of enterotoxin and superantigen-like genes. Strain-specific type I modification systems were widespread which would limit interstrain transfer of genetic material. In addition, ST2250 possessed a CRISPR/Cas system, lacking in most other STs. S. argenteus possesses important genetic differences from S. aureus, as well as between different STs, with the potential to produce distinct clinical manifestations.
ORCID iDs
Goswami, Cosmika
-
-
Item type: Article ID code: 92345 Dates: DateEvent2 December 2021Published5 November 2021AcceptedSubjects: Science > Microbiology
Science > Natural history > GeneticsDepartment: Faculty of Science > Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 17 Mar 2025 10:07 Last modified: 22 Mar 2025 08:39 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/92345