Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology (Oct 2019)

Staphylococcus aureus Small Colony Variants (SCVs): News From a Chronic Prosthetic Joint Infection

  • Guilherme Loss,
  • Patricia Martins Simões,
  • Patricia Martins Simões,
  • Florent Valour,
  • Florent Valour,
  • Marina Farrel Cortês,
  • Luiz Gonzaga,
  • Marine Bergot,
  • Sophie Trouillet-Assant,
  • Jêrome Josse,
  • Alan Diot,
  • Emiliano Ricci,
  • Ana Tereza Vasconcelos,
  • Frédéric Laurent,
  • Frédéric Laurent

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2019.00363
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Small colony variants (SCV) of Staphylococcus aureus have been reported as implicated in chronic infections. Here, we investigated the genomic and transcriptomic changes involved in the evolution from a wild-type to a SCV from in a patient with prosthetic joint infection relapse. The SCV presented a stable phenotype with no classical auxotrophy and the emergence of rifampicin resistance. Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS) analysis showed only the loss of a 42.5 kb phage and 3 deletions, among which one targeting the rpoB gene, known to be the target of rifampicin and to be associated to SCV formation in the context of a constitutively active stringent response. Transcriptomic analysis highlighted a specific signature in the SCV strain including a complex, multi-level strategy of survival and adaptation to chronicity within the host including a protection from the inflammatory response, an evasion of the immune response, a constitutively activated stringent response and a scavenging of iron sources.

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