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Adaptation of Staphylococcus aureus to ruminant and equine hosts involves SaPI‐carried variants of von Willebrand factor‐binding protein
Authors:David Viana  José Blanco  María Ángeles Tormo‐Más  Laura Selva  Caitriona M Guinane  Rafael Baselga  Juan M Corpa  Íñigo Lasa  Richard P Novick  J Ross Fitzgerald  José R Penadés
Institution:1. Centro de Investigación y Tecnología Animal, Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Agrarias (CITA‐IVIA), Apdo. 187, 12.400 Segorbe, Castellón, Spain.;2. Cardenal Herrera‐CEU University, 46113 Moncada, Valencia, Spain.;3. David Viana, José Blanco and María ángeles Tormo‐Más contributed equally to this work.;4. The Roslin Institute and Centre for Infectious Diseases, Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH16 4SB, UK.;5. Exopol, Pol. Rio Gallego D/8, 50840 San Mateo, Zaragoza, Spain.;6. Instituto de Agrobiotecnología, CSIC‐Universidad Pública de Navarra, 31006 Pamplona, Navarra, Spain.;7. Instituto de Ganadería de Monta?a (CSIC‐ULE), 24346 Grulleros, León, Spain.
Abstract:Staphylococci adapt specifically to various animal hosts by genetically determined mechanisms that are not well understood. One such adaptation involves the ability to coagulate host plasma, by which strains isolated from ruminants or horses can be differentiated from closely related human strains. Here, we report first that this differential coagulation activity is due to animal‐specific alleles of the von Willebrand factor‐binding protein (vWbp) gene, vwb, and second that these vwb alleles are carried by highly mobile pathogenicity islands, SaPIs. Although all Staphylococcus aureus possess chromosomal vwb as well as coagulase (coa) genes, neither confers species‐specific coagulation activity; however, the SaPI‐coded vWbps possess a unique N‐terminal region specific for the activation of ruminant and equine prothrombin. vWbp‐encoding SaPIs are widely distributed among S. aureus strains infecting ruminant or equine hosts, and we have identified and characterized four of these, SaPIbov4, SaPIbov5, SaPIeq1 and SaPIov2, which encode vWbpSbo4, vWbpSbo5, vWbpSeq1 and vWbpSov2 respectively. Moreover, the SaPI‐carried vwb genes are regulated differently from the chromosomal vwb genes of the same strains. We suggest that the SaPI‐encoded vWbps may represent an important host adaptation mechanism for S. aureus pathogenicity, and therefore that acquisition of vWbp‐encoding SaPIs may be determinative for animal specificity.
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