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1000 Titel
  • The Role of hlb-Converting Bacteriophages in Staphylococcus aureus Host Adaption
1000 Autor/in
  1. Rohmer, Carina |
  2. Wolz, Christiane |
1000 Erscheinungsjahr 2021
1000 Publikationstyp
  1. Artikel |
1000 Online veröffentlicht
  • 2021-06-14
1000 Erschienen in
1000 Quellenangabe
  • 31(2):109-122
1000 Copyrightjahr
  • 2021
1000 Lizenz
1000 Verlagsversion
  • https://doi.org/10.1159/000516645 |
1000 Publikationsstatus
1000 Abstract/Summary
  • As an opportunistic pathogen of humans and animals, Staphylococcus aureus asymptomatically colonizes the nasal cavity but is also a leading cause of life-threatening acute and chronic infections. The evolution of S. aureus resulting from short- and long-term adaptation to diverse hosts is tightly associated with mobile genetic elements. S. aureus strains can carry up to four temperate phages, many of which possess accessory genes encoding staphylococcal virulence factors. More than 90% of human nasal isolates of S. aureus have been shown to carry Sa3int phages, whereas invasive S. aureus isolates tend to lose these phages. Sa3int phages integrate as prophages into the bacterial hlb gene, disrupting the expression of the sphingomyelinase Hlb, an important virulence factor under specific infection conditions. Virulence factors encoded by genes carried by Sa3int phages include staphylokinase, enterotoxins, chemotaxis-inhibitory protein, and staphylococcal complement inhibitor, all of which are highly human specific and probably essential for bacterial survival in the human host. The transmission of S. aureus from humans to animals is strongly correlated with the loss of Sa3int phages, whereas phages are regained once a strain is transmitted from animals to humans. Thus, both the insertion and excision of prophages may confer a fitness advantage to this bacterium. There is also growing evidence that Sa3int phages may perform 'active lysogeny,' a process during which prophages are temporally excised from the chromosome without forming intact phage particles. The molecular mechanisms controlling the peculiar life cycle of Sa3int phages remain largely unclear. Nevertheless, their regulation is likely fine-tuned to ensure bacterial survival within different hosts.
1000 Sacherschließung
lokal β-Hemolysin
lokal Prophages
lokal Staphylococcus aureus/genetics [MeSH]
lokal Lysogeny [MeSH]
lokal Staphylococcal Infections [MeSH]
lokal Humans [MeSH]
lokal Review Article
lokal Bacteriophages/genetics [MeSH]
lokal Bacterial survival strategy
lokal Immune evasion cluster
lokal Prophages/genetics [MeSH]
lokal Animals [MeSH]
1000 Liste der Beteiligten
  1. https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/Um9obWVyLCBDYXJpbmE=|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/V29seiwgQ2hyaXN0aWFuZQ==
1000 Hinweis
  • DeepGreen-ID: 0f73960cecea4ce9960de94d462c3731 ; metadata provieded by: DeepGreen (https://www.oa-deepgreen.de/api/v1/), LIVIVO search scope life sciences (http://z3950.zbmed.de:6210/livivo), Crossref Unified Resource API (https://api.crossref.org/swagger-ui/index.html), to.science.api (https://frl.publisso.de/), ZDB JSON-API (beta) (https://zeitschriftendatenbank.de/api/), lobid - Dateninfrastruktur für Bibliotheken (https://lobid.org/resources/search)
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1000 Erstellt am 2023-03-23T10:19:38.526+0100
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1000 Zuletzt bearbeitet Sat Oct 14 09:54:26 CEST 2023
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1000 Oai Id
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