Variability of antibiotic susceptibility and toxin production of Staphylococcus aureus strains isolated from skin, soft tissue, and bone related infections
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Abstract
Background
Staphylococcus aureus is an opportunistic commensal bacterium that mostly colonizes the
skin and soft tissues. The pathogenicity of S. aureus is due to both its ability to resist
antibiotics, and the production of toxins. Here, we characterize a group of genes responsible
for toxin production and antibiotic resistance of S. aureus strains isolated from skin, soft
tissue, and bone related infections.
Results
A total of 136 S. aureus strains were collected from five different types of infection:
furuncles, pyomyositis, abscesses, Buruli ulcers, and osteomyelitis, from hospital admissions
and out-patients in Benin. All strains were resistant to benzyl penicillin, while 25% were
resistant to methicillin, and all showed sensitivity to vancomycin. Panton-Valentine
leukocidin (PVL) was the most commonly produced virulence factor (70%), followed by
staphylococcal enterotoxin B (44%). Exfoliative toxin B was produced by 1.3% of the strains,
and was only found in isolates from Buruli ulcers. The tsst-1, sec, and seh genes were rarely
detected (≤1%).
Conclusions
This study provides new insight into the prevalence of toxin and antibiotic resistance genes in
S. aureus strains responsible for skin, soft tissue, and bone infections. Our results showed that
PVL was strongly associated with pyomyositis and osteomyelitis, and that there is a high
prevalence of PVL-MRSA skin infections in Benin.
