Abstract

BackgroundStaphylococcus aureus cell wall anchored Serine Aspartate repeat containing protein D (SdrD) is a member of the microbial surface component recognising adhesive matrix molecules (MSCRAMMs). It is involved in the bacterial adhesion and virulence. However the extent of genetic variation in S. aureus sdrD gene within isolates from healthy carriers are not known. The aim of this study was to evaluate allelic variation of the sdrD gene among S. aureus from healthy nasal carriers.ResultsThe sdrD A region from 48 S. aureus isolates from healthy carriers were analysed and classified into seven variants. Variations in the sdrD A region were concentrated in the N2 and N3 subdomains. Sequence analysis of the entire sdrD gene of representative isolates revealed variations in the SD repeat and the EF motifs of the B repeat. In silico structural modelling indicates that there are no differences in the SdrD structure of the 7 variants. Variable amino acid residues mapped onto the 3D structure revealed that the variations are surface located, exist within the groove between the N2-N3 subdomains and distributed mainly on the N3 subdomain. Comparison of adhesion to keratinocytes in an in vitro cell adhesion assay, using NCTC 8325–4∆sdrD strains expressing the various sdrD gene variants, indicated a significant difference between only two complements while others showed no major difference in their adhesion.ConclusionsThis study provides evidence of sequence variations across the different domains of SdrD from S. aureus isolated from healthy nasal carriers. Proper understanding of these variations is necessary in the study of S. aureus pathogenesis.

Highlights

  • Staphylococcus aureus cell wall anchored Serine Aspartate repeat containing protein D (SdrD) is a member of the microbial surface component recognising adhesive matrix molecules (MSCRAMMs)

  • The sdrC gene was present in 99% of the isolates investigated while sdrD and sdrE genes were present in 29% and 84% of the isolates, respectively

  • None of the isolates carried the sdrD gene as a single gene

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Summary

Introduction

Staphylococcus aureus cell wall anchored Serine Aspartate repeat containing protein D (SdrD) is a member of the microbial surface component recognising adhesive matrix molecules (MSCRAMMs). It is involved in the bacterial adhesion and virulence. S. aureus expresses an array of virulence factors such as the Microbial Surface Component Recognising Adhesive Matrix Molecules (MSCRAMMs), which facilitate its successful adherence [6]. These proteins include surface proteins such as clumping factor (Clf) A, ClfB, serine-aspartate repeat containing protein C (SdrC), SdrD and SdrE. The C- terminal consists of an LPXTG cell wall-anchoring motif, hydrophobic membranespanning region and a charged cytoplasmic tail [6] (Fig. 1)

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