PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Survival of Staphylococcus aureus ST398 in the human nose after artificial inoculation.

  • Bibi C G C Slingerland,
  • Mehri Tavakol,
  • Alex J McCarthy,
  • Jodi A Lindsay,
  • Susan V Snijders,
  • Jaap A Wagenaar,
  • Alex van Belkum,
  • Margreet C Vos,
  • Henri A Verbrugh,
  • Willem J B van Wamel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048896
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 11
p. e48896

Abstract

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There is evidence that MRSA ST398 of animal origin is only capable of temporarily occupying the human nose, and it is therefore, often considered a poor human colonizer.We inoculated 16 healthy human volunteers with a mixture of the human MSSA strain 1036 (ST931, CC8) and the bovine MSSA strain 5062 (ST398, CC398), 7 weeks after a treatment with mupirocin and chlorhexidine-containing soap. Bacterial survival was studied by follow-up cultures over 21 days. The human strain 1036 was eliminated faster (median 14 days; range 2-21 days) than the bovine strain 5062 (median 21 days; range 7-21 days) but this difference was not significant (p = 0.065). The bacterial loads were significantly higher for the bovine strain on day 7 and day 21. 4/14 volunteers (28.6%) showed elimination of both strains within 21 days. Of the 10 remaining volunteers, 5 showed no differences in bacterial counts between both strains, and in the other 5 the ST398 strain far outnumbered the human S. aureus strain. Within the 21 days of follow-up, neither human strain 1036 nor bovine strain 5062 appeared to acquire or lose any mobile genetic elements. In conclusion, S. aureus ST398 strain 5062 is capable of adequately competing for a niche with a human strain and survives in the human nose for at least 21 days.