» Articles » PMID: 8300204

Effects on Virulence of Mutations in a Locus Essential for Hyaluronic Acid Capsule Expression in Group A Streptococci

Overview
Journal Infect Immun
Date 1994 Feb 1
PMID 8300204
Citations 52
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Mucoid or highly encapsulated strains of group A streptococci have been associated both with unusually severe infections and with acute rheumatic fever. Previously, we described an acapsular mutant, TX4, derived from a mucoid M-type 18 strain of a group A streptococcus by transposon mutagenesis (M. R. Wessels, A. E. Moses, J. B. Goldberg, and T. J. DiCesare, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 88:8317-8321, 1991). We now report studies further characterizing strain TX4 as well as an additional acapsular mutant, TX72. Strain TX4 was found to contain a 9.5-kb deletion of chromosomal DNA adjacent to the site of transposon Tn916 insertion. Cloned chromosomal DNA from TX4 flanking the transposon insertion site was used as a probe to demonstrate the presence of homologous regions in 11 of 11 wild-type group A streptococcal strains of various M protein types. A second acapsular mutant, TX72, had a single transposon insertion and had no apparent deletion of chromosomal DNA. The Tn916 insertion in TX72 was mapped to the hasA locus (encoding hyaluronate synthase), which lies within the chromosomal region deleted in TX4. Strain TX72 was avirulent in mice and sensitive to phagocytic killing in vitro. Transduction of either the insertion-deletion mutation from TX4 or the simple insertion mutation from TX72 to a type 24 group A streptococcus strain also resulted in loss of capsule expression, demonstrating that a homologous region of the chromosome controls capsule expression in another serotype of group A streptococci. We conclude that the hyaluronic acid capsule plays an important role in virulence and that a region of the chromosome essential for capsular polysaccharide expression is conserved among diverse group A streptococcal strains.

Citing Articles

Detoxification of reactive oxygen species by the hyaluronic acid capsule of group A .

Wilde S, Dash A, Johnson A, Mackey K, Okumura C, LaRock C Infect Immun. 2023; 91(11):e0025823.

PMID: 37874162 PMC: 10652860. DOI: 10.1128/iai.00258-23.


Identification of distinct impacts of CovS inactivation on the transcriptome of acapsular group A streptococci.

DebRoy S, Shropshire W, Vega L, Tran C, Horstmann N, Mukherjee P mSystems. 2023; 8(4):e0022723.

PMID: 37358280 PMC: 10470059. DOI: 10.1128/msystems.00227-23.


The Streptococcus pyogenes hyaluronic acid capsule promotes experimental nasal and skin infection by preventing neutrophil-mediated clearance.

Hurst J, Shannon B, Craig H, Rishi A, Tuffs S, McCormick J PLoS Pathog. 2022; 18(11):e1011013.

PMID: 36449535 PMC: 9744330. DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1011013.


Hyaluronic acid association with bacterial, fungal and viral infections: Can hyaluronic acid be used as an antimicrobial polymer for biomedical and pharmaceutical applications?.

Zamboni F, Wong C, Collins M Bioact Mater. 2022; 19:458-473.

PMID: 35574061 PMC: 9079116. DOI: 10.1016/j.bioactmat.2022.04.023.


Population Genomics of Group A Streptococcus Reveals Progressive Replacement with a Hypervirulent Clone in North America.

DebRoy S, Sanson M, Shah B, Regmi S, Vega L, Odo C mSystems. 2021; 6(4):e0049521.

PMID: 34374563 PMC: 8409732. DOI: 10.1128/mSystems.00495-21.


References
1.
Wilson A . The relative importance of the capsule and the M-antigen in determining colony form of group A streptococci. J Exp Med. 1959; 109(3):257-70. PMC: 2136946. DOI: 10.1084/jem.109.3.257. View

2.
OUCHTERLONY O . Diffusion-in-gel methods for immunological analysis. Prog Allergy. 1958; 5:1-78. View

3.
Baltimore R, Kasper D, Baker C, Goroff D . Antigenic specificity of opsonophagocytic antibodies in rabbit anti-sera to group B streptococci. J Immunol. 1977; 118(2):673-8. View

4.
Birnboim H, DOLY J . A rapid alkaline extraction procedure for screening recombinant plasmid DNA. Nucleic Acids Res. 1979; 7(6):1513-23. PMC: 342324. DOI: 10.1093/nar/7.6.1513. View

5.
Clewell D . Regeneration of insertionally inactivated streptococcal DNA fragments after excision of transposon Tn916 in Escherichia coli: strategy for targeting and cloning of genes from gram-positive bacteria. J Bacteriol. 1984; 159(1):214-21. PMC: 215615. DOI: 10.1128/jb.159.1.214-221.1984. View