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Infection and Immunity, December 2001, p. 7572-7582, Vol. 69, No. 12
Infectious Disease Research Group, Department
of Biological Sciences, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4
7AL,1 and Veterinary Laboratories
Agency, Rougham Hill, Bury St. Edmunds IP33
2RX,2 United Kingdom, and Departamento
Patolgía Infecciosa, Campus Universitario de Rabanales, 14071 Córdoba, Spain3
Received 26 April 2001/Returned for modification 25 July
2001/Accepted 20 September 2001
Streptococcus suis is an economically important
pathogen of pigs responsible for a variety of diseases including
meningitis, septicemia, arthritis, and pneumonia, although little is
known about the mechanisms of pathogenesis or virulence factors
associated with this organism. Here, we report on the distribution and
genetic diversity of the putative virulence factor suilysin, a member of the thiol-activated toxin family of gram-positive bacteria. On the
basis of PCR analysis of over 300 isolates of S. suis, the suilysin-encoding gene, sly, was detected in 69.4%
of isolates. However, sly was present in a considerably
higher proportion of isolates obtained from cases of meningitis,
septicemia, and arthritis (>80%) and isolates obtained from
asymptomatic tonsillar carriage (>90%) than lung isolates associated
with pneumonia (44%). With the exception of serotypes 1, 14, and 1/14,
there was no strong correlation between the presence of suilysin and
serotype. Analysis of the genetic diversity of suilysin by restriction
fragment length polymorphism and sequence analysis found that the
suilysin gene, where present, is highly conserved with a maximum of
1.79% diversity at the nucleotide level seen between
sly alleles. Assays of hemolytic activity and
hybridization analysis provided no evidence for a second member of the
thiol-activated toxin family in S. suis. Inverse PCR was
used to characterize regions flanking sly, which in turn
allowed the first characterization of the equivalent region in a strain
lacking sly. Sequence comparison of these regions from
sly-positive (P1/7) and sly-negative
(DH5) strains indicated that two alternative arrangements are both
flanked by genes with highest similarity to haloacid dehalogenase-like
hydrolases (5' end) and putative
N-acetylmannosamine-6-phosphate epimerases (3' end).
However, sly appears to be completely absent from the
alternative arrangement, and a gene of unknown function is located in
the equivalent position. Finally, PCR analysis of multiple
sly-positive and -negative strains indicated that these
two alternative genetic arrangements are conserved among many S.
suis isolates.
0019-9567/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.69.12.7572-7582.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Distribution and Genetic Diversity of Suilysin in
Streptococcus suis Isolated from Different Diseases of
Pigs and Characterization of the Genetic Basis of Suilysin
Absence
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Infectious
Disease Research Group, Department of Biological Sciences, University
of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, United Kingdom. Phone: 44 2476 528359. Fax: 44 2476 523701. Email: a.m.whatmore{at}warwick.ac.uk.
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