Abstract

BackgroundGroup A Streptococcus pyogenes (GAS) exhibits a high degree of clinically relevant phenotypic diversity. Strains vary widely in terms of antibiotic resistance (AbR), clinical severity, and transmission rate. Currently, strain identification is achieved by emm typing (direct sequencing of the genomic segment coding for the antigenic portion of the M protein) or by multilocus genotyping methods. Phenotype analysis, including critical AbR typing, is generally achieved by much slower and more laborious direct culture-based methods.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe compare genotype identification (by emm typing and PCR/ESI-MS) with directly measured phenotypes (AbR and outbreak associations) for 802 clinical isolates of GAS collected from symptomatic patients over a period of 6 years at 10 military facilities in the United States. All independent strain characterization methods are highly correlated. This shows that recombination, horizontal transfer, and other forms of reassortment are rare in GAS insofar as housekeeping genes, primary virulence and antibiotic resistance determinants, and the emm gene are concerned. Therefore, genotyping methods offer an efficient way to predict emm type and the associated AbR and virulence phenotypes.Conclusions/SignificanceThe data presented here, combined with much historical data, suggest that emm typing assays and faster molecular methods that infer emm type from genomic signatures could be used to efficiently infer critical phenotypic characteristics based on robust genotype: phenotype correlations. This, in turn, would enable faster and better-targeted responses during identified outbreaks of constitutively resistant or particularly virulent emm types.

Highlights

  • Group A Streptococcus pyogenes (GAS) is a common agent of pharyngitis, febrile respiratory infection, and pneumonia

  • Penicillin is effective in treatment and prevention of GAS [2,3,4], but other antibiotics are often required for individuals who are allergic to penicillin [5]

  • We present antibiotic resistance (AbR) and PCR/ESI-MS emm group data from 802 clinical GAS isolates collected from patients with pharyngitis or other apparent GAS-associated symptoms over a period of 6 years at 10 US military facilities

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Summary

Introduction

Group A Streptococcus pyogenes (GAS) is a common agent of pharyngitis, febrile respiratory infection, and pneumonia. That study presented validation/control data collected on 132 previously isolated and cultured GAS strains of 17 different emm sequence types from 5 recruit training centers collected in 2002 and 2003 [7]. We present AbR and PCR/ESI-MS emm group data from 802 clinical GAS isolates collected from patients with pharyngitis or other apparent GAS-associated symptoms over a period of 6 years at 10 US military facilities.

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