Abstract

Invasive diseases caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae have been described increasingly. Several reports indicate the destructive feature of endocarditis attributable to nontoxigenic strains. However, few reports have dealt with the pathogenicity of invasive strains. The present investigation demonstrates a phenotypic trait that may be used to identify potentially invasive strains. The study also draws attention to clinical and microbiological aspects observed in 5 cases of endocarditis due to C. diphtheriae that occurred outside Europe. Four cases occurred in female school-age children (7-14 years) treated at different hospitals in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. All patients developed other complications including septicemia, renal failure and/or arthritis. Surgical treatment was performed on 2 patients for valve replacement. Lethality was observed in 40% of the cases. Microorganisms isolated from 5 blood samples and identified as C. diphtheriae subsp mitis (N = 4) and C. diphtheriae subsp gravis (N = 1) displayed an aggregative adherence pattern to HEp-2 cells and identical one-dimensional SDS-PAGE protein profiles. Aggregative-adhering invasive strains of C. diphtheriae showed 5 distinct RAPD profiles. Despite the clonal diversity, all 5 C. diphtheriae invasive isolates seemed to display special bacterial adhesive properties that may favor blood-barrier disruption and systemic dissemination of bacteria. In conclusion, blood isolates from patients with endocarditis exhibited a unique adhering pattern, suggesting a pathogenic role of aggregative-adhering C. diphtheriae of different clones in endocarditis. Accordingly, the aggregative-adherence pattern may be used as an indication of some invasive potential of C. diphtheriae strains.

Highlights

  • Invasive diseases add new aspects to the infectious processes caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae, and identify this species as an emerging pathogen

  • In addition to describing clinical and microbiological characteristics that illustrate the destructive features of endocarditis due to C. diphtheriae, this study was undertaken to assess the patterns of adherence to HEp-2 cells of endocarditis-associated C. diphtheriae strains representative of five different clones

  • We have found the incidence of infective endocarditis in the literature to be generally higher in males than in females (2:1), and the average age group affected is in the fifth decade [1]

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Summary

Introduction

Invasive diseases add new aspects to the infectious processes caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae, and identify this species as an emerging pathogen. The ability to survive within cultured epithelial cells was observed for C. diphtheriae strains isolated from throat and blood. Further study showed that all sucrose fermenting and non-fermenting strains isolated from throat and skin lesions exhibited localized and diffuse adherence patterns, respectively [16].

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