Abstract

S. Treptococcus constellatus, a member of the S. Treptococcus anginosus Group (SAG), and known as part of indigenous oral microbiota, has been described to cause abscesses in various regions of the body, despite this organism appears to be innocuous, in general at its habitat. In this communication, we report a biofilm-forming capacity of a facultative anaerobic gram-positive coccus isolated as a dominant bacterium in an odontogenic subperiosteal abscess lesiony. The clinical isolate designated as strain H39 formed dense meshwork structures around the cells that are typical for biofilm forming bacteria, and produced viscous materials in its spent culture media. The 16S rRNA gene sequence of strain H39 was 99% homologous to that of S. Treptococcus constellatus ATCC 27823, a type strain for S. Treptococcus constellatus. Phylogenetic analysis using data sets of recN, groEL, tuf and 16S rRNA genes showed a sister relationship between strain H39 and S. Treptococcus constellatus ATCC 27823. Dense meshwork-like structures found on strain H39 were observed on S. Treptococcus constellatus ATCC 27823, but not on S. intermedius ATCC 27335 and S. anginosus ATCC 33397. Biofilm assay using 96-wells polystyrene microtiter plates revealed that S. Treptococcus constellatus strains H39 and ATCC 27823 can form dense biofilm on abiotic materials consistently. S. intermedius ATCC 27335 was able to form biofilm on microtiter plates at a lesser extent to those of S. Treptococcus constellatus strains. S. anginosus ATCC 33397 did not form biofilm on an abitotic material. As conclusions, dense meshwork structures around the cells of S. Treptococcus constellatus, and the capacity of S. Treptococcus constellatus and S. intermedius to form biofilm on abiotic materials as observed in this study might be related to the pathogenicity of these two organism and the tropism of organisms in SAG. As recently suggested, phylogenetic analysis could be a powerful tool for differentiating and identifying clinical isolates belong to SAG.

Highlights

  • Treptococcus constellatus has been cultured from dental caries and periodontitis lesions, but has been found to cause purulent infections with abscess formation in various regions of the body, especially in thorax and head and neck regions, despite this organism appears to be innocuous at its natural habitat [3,4,5]

  • The nucleotide sequence of the 16S rRNA gene of the clinical isolate amplified with a primer pair of 27F (5’-AGAGTTTGATCCTGGCTCAG-3’) and 1525R (5’-AAAGGAGGTGATCCAGCC-3’) was identical [DNA Data Bank of Japan (DDBJ: http://www.ddbj.nig.ac.jp) accession: AB749301] and 99% homologous to S

  • Treptococcus constellatus was strongly supported by high bootstrap values (Figure 1)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

S. Treptococcus constellatus is a part of normal commensal flora in the mouth, oropharynx and gastrointestinal tract, and composes the S. Treptococcus anginosus Group (SAG), together with S. Treptococcus intermedius [1,2]. S. Treptococcus constellatus has been cultured from dental caries and periodontitis lesions, but has been found to cause purulent infections with abscess formation in various regions of the body, especially in thorax and head and neck regions, despite this organism appears to be innocuous at its natural habitat [3,4,5]. S. anginosus and S. intermedius in SAG show tropism for abdomen and genitourinary tract, and for liver and Central Nerve System (CNS), respectively. There apparently appears to be species bias to some infections, but mechanisms behind such phenomena are not fully understood [6,7]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.