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Insights on evolution of virulence and resistance from the complete genome analysis of an early methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus strain and a biofilm-producing methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis strain
Authors:Gill Steven R  Fouts Derrick E  Archer Gordon L  Mongodin Emmanuel F  Deboy Robert T  Ravel Jacques  Paulsen Ian T  Kolonay James F  Brinkac Lauren  Beanan Mauren  Dodson Robert J  Daugherty Sean C  Madupu Ramana  Angiuoli Samuel V  Durkin A Scott  Haft Daniel H  Vamathevan Jessica  Khouri Hoda  Utterback Terry  Lee Chris  Dimitrov George  Jiang Lingxia  Qin Haiying  Weidman Jan  Tran Kevin  Kang Kathy  Hance Ioana R  Nelson Karen E  Fraser Claire M
Institution:Microbial Genomics, The Institute for Genomic Research, 9712 Medical Center Dr., Rockville, MD 20850, USA. srgill@tigr.org
Abstract:Staphylococcus aureus is an opportunistic pathogen and the major causative agent of numerous hospital- and community-acquired infections. Staphylococcus epidermidis has emerged as a causative agent of infections often associated with implanted medical devices. We have sequenced the approximately 2.8-Mb genome of S. aureus COL, an early methicillin-resistant isolate, and the approximately 2.6-Mb genome of S. epidermidis RP62a, a methicillin-resistant biofilm isolate. Comparative analysis of these and other staphylococcal genomes was used to explore the evolution of virulence and resistance between these two species. The S. aureus and S. epidermidis genomes are syntenic throughout their lengths and share a core set of 1,681 open reading frames. Genome islands in nonsyntenic regions are the primary source of variations in pathogenicity and resistance. Gene transfer between staphylococci and low-GC-content gram-positive bacteria appears to have shaped their virulence and resistance profiles. Integrated plasmids in S. epidermidis carry genes encoding resistance to cadmium and species-specific LPXTG surface proteins. A novel genome island encodes multiple phenol-soluble modulins, a potential S. epidermidis virulence factor. S. epidermidis contains the cap operon, encoding the polyglutamate capsule, a major virulence factor in Bacillus anthracis. Additional phenotypic differences are likely the result of single nucleotide polymorphisms, which are most numerous in cell envelope proteins. Overall differences in pathogenicity can be attributed to genome islands in S. aureus which encode enterotoxins, exotoxins, leukocidins, and leukotoxins not found in S. epidermidis.
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