Abstract

The Group B streptococcus (GBS) can express a capsular polysaccharide (CPS). There are ten recognized CPSs (Ia, Ib, and IIā€“IX). A GBS isolate is considered nontypeable (NT) when CPS cannot be identified as one of ten types. Two groups of GBS NT isolates were studied, isolates without surface sialic acid (sia(āˆ’)) and isolates with surface sialic acid (sia(+)). The first objective was to characterize NT sia(āˆ’) isolates that failed CPS identification by an immunodiffusion antisera typing assay and a RT-PCR capsule typing assay. NT sia(āˆ’) isolates were characterized by assaying phenotypic changes and identifying covR/S mutations that may potentially have a role in the altered phenotypes. The second objective was to characterize NT sia(+) isolates that failed to identify as one of the ten CPS types by an immundiffusion antisera-based typing assay and a RT-PCR capsule typing assay yet expressed capsule. Fifteen NT sia(āˆ’) isolates displayed increased Ī² hemolysis/orange pigmentation, decreased CAMP activity, inability to form biofilm, and susceptibility to phagocytosis by human blood. DNA sequence analysis of the covR/S genes in the sia(āˆ’) isolates found mutations in 14 of 15 isolates assayed. These mutations in the covR/S genes may potentially contribute to lack of expression of phenotypic traits assayed in vitro. For the three NT sia(+) isolates, whole-genome sequence analyses identified two isolates with cps gene clusters identical to the recently described and uncommon CPSIIa type. The third isolate possessed a hybrid cluster containing cps genes for both CPSIIa and CPSV suggesting recombination between these two gene clusters.

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