Abstract

Streptococcus suis is a zoonotic pathogen that can cause invasive infections in humans and pigs. The S. suis cps31 strains (SS31) were frequently isolated from healthy or diseased pigs and one human infection case caused by SS31 was reported in Thailand in 2015. However, except for a few epidemiologic studies, little information is available for SS31. To characterize SS31, a total of 75 SS31 strains were analyzed, including 52 strains that were isolated from healthy or diseased pigs and 23 strains whose information was accessed from NCBI. The MLST analysis showed that SS31 exhibited high heterogeneity. The phylogenetic analysis and minimum core-genome (MCG) classification revealed that 75 strains were clustered into 3 lineages. Strains from NCBI mainly at Lineage 2 belong to MCG7-3, and most of strains from China at Lineage 3 belong to MCG7-2. This finding indicated that their evolutionary path was different. All SS31 strains were resistant to more than three classes of antimicrobial agents, and major antimicrobial resistance genes for strains from Lineage 3 were carried by prophages. This observation is different from the previous observation that integrative conjugative elements and integrative and mobilizable elements are major vehicles of antimicrobial resistance genes for S. suis. In addition to strains isolated from diseased pigs, seven of 47 strains isolated from clinically healthy pigs were also pathogenic in a zebrafish infection model. These findings reveal unique characteristics of SS31 and contribute to establishing public health surveillance for SS31 and clarifying the diversity of S. suis.

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