Pathogens (Feb 2021)

Strain Characterization of <i>Streptococcus suis</i> Serotypes 28 and 31, Which Harbor the Resistance Genes <i>optrA</i> and <i>ant(6)-Ia</i>

  • Shujie Wang,
  • Defu Zhang,
  • Chenggang Jiang,
  • Haijuan He,
  • Chenchen Cui,
  • Weitong Duan,
  • Shouping Hu,
  • Jun Wang,
  • Xuehui Cai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens10020213
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
p. 213

Abstract

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Streptococcus suis causes disease in pigs and is implicated increasingly in human disease worldwide. Although most clinical cases are associated with serotype 2, infections by other serotypes have sometimes been reported. Here, we sequenced the genome of a multidrug-resistant S. suis serotype 28 (strain 11313) and a multidrug-resistant S. suis serotype 31 (strain 11LB5). Strain 11313 was apathogenic in mouse infection models, whereas strain 11LB5 displayed ganglion demyelination, meningeal thickening, congestion, mononuclear cell infiltration, massive proliferation of cortical glial cells, and bacteria (>104 CFU/g) in the spinal cord and ganglia in mice. Furthermore, immunohistochemistry found that the heavily infiltrated glial cells were astrocytes. Strain 11313 harbored the resistance genes ant(6)-Ia, erm(B), optrA, tet(l), tet(o), and strain 11LB5 harbored the resistance genes ant(6)-Ia, erm(B), tet(40), tet(o/w/32/o), aac(6′)-aph(2″). Mouse studies showed that strain 11LB5 exhibited a similar virulence to serotype 2 strain 700794, highlighting the need for surveillance of the other serotype S. suis isolates, in addition to serotype 2, in farms. This is the first report of the aminoglycoside resistance gene ant(6)-Ia in S. suis from animals. This suggests that S. suis might serve as an antibiotic resistance reservoir, which spreads the resistance gene ant(6)-Ia or optrA to other streptococcal pathogens on farms.

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