A Link Between Virulence and Ecological Abundance in Natural Populations of Staphylococcus aureus

Staphylococcus aureus is a major cause of severe infection in humans and yet is carried without symptoms by a large proportion of the population. We used multilocus sequence typing to characterize isolates of S. aureus recovered from asymptomatic nasal carriage and from episodes of severe disease within a defined population. We identified a number of frequently carried genotypes that were disproportionately common as causes of disease, even taking into account their relative abundance among carriage isolates. The existence of these ecologically abundant hypervirulent clones suggests that factors promoting the ecological fitness of this important pathogen also increase its virulence.

[1]  E. Feil,et al.  Population structure and evolutionary dynamics of pathogenic bacteria , 2000, BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology.

[2]  J. M. Smith,et al.  Estimating recombinational parameters in Streptococcus pneumoniae from multilocus sequence typing data. , 2000, Genetics.

[3]  Nicholas P. J. Day,et al.  Multilocus Sequence Typing for Characterization of Methicillin-Resistant and Methicillin-Susceptible Clones ofStaphylococcus aureus , 2000, Journal of Clinical Microbiology.

[4]  M. Achtman,et al.  The relative contributions of recombination and mutation to the divergence of clones of Neisseria meningitidis. , 1999, Molecular biology and evolution.

[5]  B. Spratt Multilocus sequence typing: molecular typing of bacterial pathogens in an era of rapid DNA sequencing and the internet. , 1999, Current opinion in microbiology.

[6]  J. Musser,et al.  An outbreak of invasive group A streptococcal disease associated with high carriage rates of the invasive clone among school-aged children. , 1997, JAMA.

[7]  J. Steinberg,et al.  Nosocomial and community-acquired Staphylococcus aureus bacteremias from 1980 to 1993: impact of intravascular devices and methicillin resistance. , 1996, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

[8]  P. Klemm Fimbriae Adhesion, Genetics, Biogenesis, and Vaccines , 1994 .

[9]  R. Gaynes,et al.  An overview of nosocomial infections, including the role of the microbiology laboratory , 1993, Clinical Microbiology Reviews.

[10]  J. M. Smith,et al.  How clonal are bacteria? , 1993, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[11]  R. Novick Molecular Biology of the Staphylococci , 1990 .