International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Sep 2020)

Increase of emm1 isolates among group A Streptococcus strains causing scarlet fever in Shanghai, China

  • Mingliang Chen,
  • Jiehao Cai,
  • Mark R. Davies,
  • Yuefang Li,
  • Chi Zhang,
  • Weilei Yao,
  • Dechuan Kong,
  • Hao Pan,
  • Xi Zhang,
  • Mei Zeng,
  • Min Chen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 98
pp. 305 – 314

Abstract

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Objective: Scarlet fever epidemics caused by group A Streptococcus (GAS) have been ongoing in China since 2011. However, limited data are available on the dynamic molecular characterizations of the epidemic strains. Method: Epidemiological data of scarlet fever in Shanghai were obtained from the National Notifiable Infectious Disease Surveillance System. Throat swabs of patients with scarlet fever and asymptomatic school-age children were cultured. Illumina sequencing was performed on 39emm1 isolates. Results: The annual incidence of scarlet fever was 7.5–19.4/100,000 persons in Shanghai during 2011–2015, with an average GAS carriage rate being 7.6% in school-age children. The proportion ofemm1 GAS strains increased from 3.8% in 2011 to 48.6% in 2014; they harbored a superantigen profile similar to emm12 isolates, except for the speA gene. Two predominant clones, SH001-emm12, and SH002-emm1, circulated in 66.9% of scarlet fever cases and 44.8% of carriers. Genomic analysis showed emm1 isolates throughout China constituted distinct clades, enriched by the presence of mobile genetic elements carrying the multidrug-resistant determinants ermB and tetM and virulence genes speA, speC, and spd1. Conclusion: A significant increase in the proportion ofemm1 strains occurred in the GAS population, causing scarlet fever in China. Ongoing surveillance is warranted to monitor the dynamic changes of GAS clones.

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