Abstract

Staphylococcal enterotoxin A (SEA) is one of the major staphylococcal enterotoxins which may cause food-borne outbreaks. In order to investigate the difference in genomic types and to elucidate the most disseminated strains for enterotoxin A-producing strains of Staphylococcus aureus, a total of 60 SEA Staph. aureus strains isolated from food and clinical samples in Taiwan and 30 strains of the same enterotoxigenic type of strains obtained from geographically far distant locations were compared for their pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) patterns. The rare cutting endonuclease SmaI generated 10 distinct genome patterns for the 60 local SEA isolates and 15 and eight genome patterns, respectively, for the 20 and 10 SEA strains originally isolated from the USA and other countries. The local isolates are less diverse in genome patterns as compared to the US isolates. Of all these PFGE patterns, a certain pattern, such as pattern 3, is shared by the food and clinical isolates and the local and foreign isolates. Thus, although SEA Staph. aureus strains from geographically far distant locations showed considerable genetic diversity, PFGE pattern 3 strain might be one of the most disseminated strains.

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