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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Streptococcus agalactiae is a major pathogen of neonates and immunocompromised adults. Prior
studies have demonstrated that, beyond the neonatal period, S. agalactiae rarely causes invasive
infections in children. However, during 2004–2005, S. agalactiae was the causative agent of 60
meningitis episodes in children aged 3 months to 12 years from Angola. To identify and study the
specific causative genetic lineages of S. agalactiae childhood meningitis, which lack
characterization to date, we conducted an extensive molecular analysis of the recovered isolates
(n521). This constitutes what we believe to be the first molecular study of the population
structure of invasive S. agalactiae isolates from Africa. A low genetic diversity was observed
among the isolates, where the majority belonged to clonal complex (CC) 17 presenting the
capsular subtype III-2 (86% of cases) and marked by the intron group II GBSi1, which has
previously been observed to be associated with neonatal hosts. The predominance of single-locus
variants of sequence type (ST) 17 suggested the local diversification of this hypervirulent clone,
which displayed novel alleles of the fbsB and sip virulence genes. The absence of the scpB–lmb
region in two S. agalactiae isolates with the Ia/ST23 genotype is more typical of cattle than human
isolates. Globally, these data provide novel information about the enhanced invasiveness of the
CC17 genetic lineage in older children and suggest the local diversification of this clone, which
may be related to the future emergence of a novel epidemic clone in Angola.
Description
Keywords
Infecções Sexualmente Transmissíveis Streptococcus Agalactiae Meningitis
Pedagogical Context
Citation
J Med Microbiol. 2011 Sep;60(Pt 9):1276-80. Epub 2011 Apr 7
Publisher
Society for General Microbiology
