Aims: To investigate the presence of the staphylococcal
enterotoxin genes seg, seh and sei among clinical and nasal isolates.
Place and Duration of Study: Department of Biology and Biotechnology, An-Najah
N. University, Palestine, in 2011.
Methodology: A total 124 S. aureus isolates were collected, forty three were
nasal and 81 were clinical isolates. PCR technique was used to detect
enterotoxin genes seg, seh and sei, mecA gene and analysis of SCCmec types.
Enterotoxigenic strains were also typed using coagulase typing kit.
Results: Fifty two (41.9%) isolates were positive for one or more of these
enterotoxin genes. The prevalence of toxin genes among S. aureus isolated from
nasal swabs 25/43 (58.1%) was higher than those isolated from clinical samples
27/81 (33.3%). Combination of the toxin genes was noted only in MSSA isolate
from both nasal swabs and clinical samples. Distribution of toxin genes in MSSA
isolates was higher (49.5%) than those in MRSA isolates (21.2%). SCCmec typing
showed that the MRSA enterotoxigenic strain were belonged to types II, III and
IVa. MRSA strains were found to belong to coagulase serotypes II, III and VII,
while MSSA strains were belonged to serotypes II-VII. In nasal samples, 16/25
(64.0%) of enterotoxigenic strains showed the genotype seg+/sei+, while in
clinical samples 1/27 (3.7%), 1/27 (3.7%) and 3/27 (11.1%) of enterotoxigenic
strains showed the genotypes seg+/seh+, seg+/sei+ and seg+/seh+/sei+,
respectively. This study showed that the majority of the isolates 42/124
(33.9%) were seg+, while none of nasal strains harbored seh gene.
Conclusion: The prevalence of seg, seh and sei genes in the S. aureus isolated
from nasal swabs differed significantly from those obtained from clinical
samples, as well as the prevalence of the same genes in MSSA differed
significantly from those in MRSA. In addition, S. aureus isolates from clinical
and nasal swabs could serve as a possible reservoir of newly described seg, seh
and sei genes.
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
Prevalence of seg, seh and sei Genes among Clinical and Nasal Staphylococcus aureus Isolates in Palestine.pdf | 355.06 KB |