<i>egc</i> , A Highly Prevalent Operon of Enterotoxin Gene, Forms a Putative Nursery of Superantigens in <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i>

Sophie Jarraud(Laboratoire National de Référence), Marie Alix Peyrat(Institut National de Santé Publique), Annick Lim(Institut Pasteur), Anne Tristan(Laboratoire National de Référence), Michèle Bes(Laboratoire National de Référence), Christophe Mougel(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Jérôme Étienne(Laboratoire National de Référence), François Vandenesch(Laboratoire National de Référence), Marc Bonneville(Institut National de Santé Publique), Gérard Lina(Laboratoire National de Référence)
The Journal of Immunology
January 1, 2001
Cited by 495Open Access
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Abstract

The recently described staphylococcal enterotoxins (SE) G and I were originally identified in two separate strains of Staphylococcus aureus. We have previously shown that the corresponding genes seg and sei are present in S. aureus in tandem orientation, on a 3.2-kb DNA fragment (Jarraud, J. et al. 1999. J. Clin. Microbiol. 37:2446-2449). Sequence analysis of seg-sei intergenic DNA and flanking regions revealed three enterotoxin-like open reading frames related to seg and sei, designated sek, sel, and sem, and two pseudogenes, psi ent1 and psi ent2. RT-PCR analysis showed that all these genes, including seg and sei, belong to an operon, designated the enterotoxin gene cluster (egc). Recombinant SEG, SEI, SEK, SEL, and SEM showed superantigen activity, each with a specific V beta pattern. Distribution studies of genes encoding superantigens in clinical S. aureus isolates showed that most strains harbored such genes and in particular the enterotoxin gene cluster, whatever the disease they caused. Phylogenetic analysis of enterotoxin genes indicated that they all potentially derived from this cluster, identifying egc as a putative nursery of enterotoxin genes.


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