Molecular Epidemiology of nga and NAD Glycohydrolase/ADP-Ribosyltransferase Activity among Streptococcus pyogenes Causing Streptococcal Toxic Shock …

DL Stevens, DB Salmi, ER McIndoo… - The Journal of …, 2000 - academic.oup.com
DL Stevens, DB Salmi, ER McIndoo, AE Bryant
The Journal of infectious diseases, 2000academic.oup.com
Severe invasive group A streptococcal (GAS) infections emerged in the late 1980s, yet no
single virulence factor has been common to all isolates from infected patients. A strong
association was recently found between isolates of such cases (regardless of M type) and
the production of NAD glycohydrolase (NADase). Of interest, all M-1 strains isolated after
1988 were positive for NADase, whereas virtually all M-1 GAS were previously negative for
NADase. Genetic analysis demonstrated that GAS isolates were> 96% identical in nga and …
Abstract
Severe invasive group A streptococcal (GAS) infections emerged in the late 1980s, yet no single virulence factor has been common to all isolates from infected patients. A strong association was recently found between isolates of such cases (regardless of M type) and the production of NAD glycohydrolase (NADase). Of interest, all M-1 strains isolated after 1988 were positive for NADase, whereas virtually all M-1 GAS were previously negative for NADase. Genetic analysis demonstrated that GAS isolates were >96% identical in nga and 199% identical in their upstream regulatory sequences. Furthermore, because NADase-negative strains did not produce immunoreactive NADase, we concluded that additional regulatory element(s) control NADase production. NADase purified from GAS altered neutrophil-directed migration and chemiluminescence responses and had potent ADP-ribosyltransferase activity. In summary, the temporal relationship of NADase expression, alone or with other streptococcal virulence factors, may contribute to the pathogenesis of invasive GAS infections.
Oxford University Press