The Role of Prophage ÏSa3 in the Adaption of Staphylococcus aureus ST398 Sublineages from Human to Animal Hosts.
Antibiotics (Basel)
; 13(2)2024 Jan 23.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38391498
ABSTRACT
Staphylococcus aureus sequence type (ST) 398 is a lineage affecting both humans and livestock worldwide. However, the mechanisms underlying its clonal evolution are still not clearly elucidated. We applied whole-genome sequencing (WGS) typing to 45 S. aureus strains from China and Canada between 2005 and 2014, in order to gain insight into their evolutionary pathway. Based on WGS phylogenetic analysis, 42 isolates were assigned to the human-associated clade (I/II-GOI) and 3 isolates to livestock-associated clade (IIa). Phylogeny of ÏSa3 sequences revealed five phage groups (Groups 1-5), with Group 1 carrying ÏSa3-Group 1 (ÏSa3-G1), Group 2 carrying ÏSa3-G2, Group 3 carrying ÏSa3-G3, Group 4 carrying ÏSa3-G4 and Group 5 lacking ÏSa3. ÏSa3-G1 was only found in strains that accounted for the most ancestral human clade I, while ÏSa3-G2, ÏSa3-G3 and ÏSa3-G4 were found restricted to sublineages within clade II-GOI. Some isolates of clade II-GOI were also found to be ÏSa3-negative or resistant to methicillin which are unusual characteristics for human-adapted isolates. This study demonstrated a strong association between phylogenetic grouping and phage type, suggesting an important role of ÏSa3 prophage in the evolution of human-adapted ST398 subclones. In addition, our results suggest that this subclone slowly began to adapt to animal hosts by losing ÏSa3 and acquiring methicillin resistance, which was observed in some strains of human-associated clade II-GOI, an intermediate human to livestock transmission clade.
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2024
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Article