Abstract

The toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (TSST-1), encoded by tst gene, has been proposed to cause staphylococcal toxic shock syndrome (TSS) in a susceptible host, which highlights the need to evaluate the level of tst gene expression and molecular genetic characteristics of the tst-positive isolates. A total of 916 S. aureus isolates collected from seven hospitals in China were screened for the tst gene. The tst positive isolates were characterized by spa, SCCmec, PFGE, and agr typing. Representative strains were also subjected to MLST typing. qRT-PCR was used to quantify tst and major virulence regulator genes expression. We also sequenced the regions of promoter and open reading frame (ORF) of tst to investigate whether they correlate with the variation in tst expression. We found 208 (22.7%) of surveyed isolates including 198 (29.8%) of MRSA and 10 (4.0%) of MSSA isolates harbored the tst gene. The most common clone among tst positive MRSA isolates belonged to ST5 (CC5)-agr2-t002-SCCmecII. The amount of tst mRNA varied 8.4-folds among clinical S. aureus isolates. Sequencing the tst promoter revealed a base T deletion in tst high expressed isolates. As for major virulence regulators, srrA, sarT, RNAIII, and ccpA in four tst differentially expressed strains were detected to be highly expressed, respectively. Our study revealed high prevalence of ST5 (CC5)-agr2-t002-SCCmecII clone among tst positive MRSA in hospitals from China. The levels of tst expression among clinical S. aureus isolates varied, which may be associated with tst promoter and variations in specific virulence regulators.

Highlights

  • Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus), as the ubiquitous human pathogen, causes some of the most severe infections in both hospital and community settings

  • A total of 15 spa types were yielded among the 208 tst-positive strains, of which 8 spa types were related exclusively to MRSA, 2 exclusively to MSSA, and 5 to both

  • The 208 tst-positive isolates were classified into 13 pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) types that were designated by symbols A to M (Figure 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus), as the ubiquitous human pathogen, causes some of the most severe infections in both hospital and community settings. Molecular Typing and tst Expression of S. aureus. S. aureus superantigens (SAgs), remarkably resistant to heat, acids, proteolysis and desiccation, are an extraordinary family of non-glycosylated low-molecular-weight exoproteins (Spaulding et al, 2013). The toxins of this family have the capacity to trigger excessive and non-conventional T-cell activation and cytokines release, and interfere with immune system function systemically (Spaulding et al, 2013; Kulhankova et al, 2014). The toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (TSST-1), encoded by tst gene, is a significant member of SAgs and may lead to staphylococcal toxic shock syndrome (TSS) in a susceptible host (Spaulding et al, 2013)

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