Heliyon (Aug 2024)
Identification and genomic analyses of a Streptococcus suis ST25 strain associated with the first human septicemia in mainland China
Abstract
Streptococcus suis (S. suis) is a Gram-positive bacterium and the main culprit behind zoonotic outbreaks, posing a serious threat to public health. The prevalent strains in China are mainly of sequence types (ST) 1 and 7, with few cases of human infections caused by other sequence type being reported. This study presents the first isolation of a ST25 strain from the blood of a septicemic patient. A 57-year-old febrile patient was admitted to a hospital in Hainan of China, diagnosed as septicemia and hepatic dysfunction. A strain of S. suis was isolated from blood culture and confirmed to be serotype 2 and ST25 through 16S rRNA sequencing and whole-genome sequencing, and its genome was further analyzed for gene functions and presence of drug resistance genes. The full-length genome of strain HN28 spans 2,280,124 bp and encodes a total of 2291 proteins. Genes annotated in COG, GO, KEGG, CAZy, and PHl databases accounted for 75.38 %, 69.14 %, 55.35 %, 4.58 %, and 11.87 % of the total predicted proteins, respectively. Virulence factor analysis revealed the presence of seven putative virulence genes in strain HN28. Analysis using the CARD database identified 51 resistance genes in HN28, alongside abundant exocytosis systems. These findings underscore the occurrence of S. suis infections in humans caused by less common ST, emphasizing the need for enhanced epidemiological investigations and monitoring of S. suis infections in the human population.