Abstract

BackgroundStreptococcus canis is an important opportunistic pathogen of dogs and cats that can also infect a wide range of additional mammals including cows where it can cause mastitis. It is also an emerging human pathogen.ResultsHere we provide characterization of the first genome sequence for this species, strain FSL S3-227 (milk isolate from a cow with an intra-mammary infection). A diverse array of putative virulence factors was encoded by the S. canis FSL S3-227 genome. Approximately 75% of these gene sequences were homologous to known Streptococcal virulence factors involved in invasion, evasion, and colonization. Present in the genome are multiple potentially mobile genetic elements (MGEs) [plasmid, phage, integrative conjugative element (ICE)] and comparison to other species provided convincing evidence for lateral gene transfer (LGT) between S. canis and two additional bovine mastitis causing pathogens (Streptococcus agalactiae, and Streptococcus dysgalactiae subsp. dysgalactiae), with this transfer possibly contributing to host adaptation. Population structure among isolates obtained from Europe and USA [bovine = 56, canine = 26, and feline = 1] was explored. Ribotyping of all isolates and multi locus sequence typing (MLST) of a subset of the isolates (n = 45) detected significant differentiation between bovine and canine isolates (Fisher exact test: P = 0.0000 [ribotypes], P = 0.0030 [sequence types]), suggesting possible host adaptation of some genotypes. Concurrently, the ancestral clonal complex (54% of isolates) occurred in many tissue types, all hosts, and all geographic locations suggesting the possibility of a wide and diverse niche.ConclusionThis study provides evidence highlighting the importance of LGT in the evolution of the bacteria S. canis, specifically, its possible role in host adaptation and acquisition of virulence factors. Furthermore, recent LGT detected between S. canis and human bacteria (Streptococcus urinalis) is cause for concern, as it highlights the possibility for continued acquisition of human virulence factors for this emerging zoonotic pathogen.

Highlights

  • Streptococcus canis is an important opportunistic pathogen of dogs and cats that can infect a wide range of additional mammals including cows where it can cause mastitis

  • Characterization of the genome sequence for S. canis strain FSL S3-227 detected a high diversity of virulence factors

  • Three quarters of the genes that were homologous to known Streptococcus virulence factors are involved in invasion, evasion, and colonization, perhaps explaining S. canis's ability to infect a wide range of tissue types

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Summary

Introduction

Streptococcus canis is an important opportunistic pathogen of dogs and cats that can infect a wide range of additional mammals including cows where it can cause mastitis. Described as β-hemolytic streptococci isolated from dogs and cows that possessed the Lancefield group G antigen [1], Streptococcus canis has subsequently been isolated from a variety of animal sources including cats, rats, rabbits, minks, foxes, a Japanese raccoon dog, and humans [2,3,4]. Their study was biased towards the characterization of isolates from blood samples (isolates from other body sites were less likely to be characterized)

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