4.6 Article

Phage conversion of Panton-Valentine leukocidin in Staphylococcus aureus:: molecular analysis of a PVL-converting phage, φSLT

Journal

GENE
Volume 268, Issue 1-2, Pages 195-206

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0378-1119(01)00390-0

Keywords

phage conversion; Panton-Valentine leukocidin; Staphylococcus aureus; temperate phage; bi-component toxin

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Staphylococcal Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL) is an important virulence factor, which causes leukocytolysis and tissue necrosis. Our previous report on the existence of the PVL genes (lukS-PV and lukF-PV) on the genome of prophage phi PVL in the Staphylococcus aureus strain Vs suggested the horizontal transmission of PVL genes by temperate bacteriophage among S. aureus (Kaneko, et al., 1998. Gene 215, 57-67). Here, we demonstrated the phage conversion of S. aureus leading to the production of PVL by discovery of a novel PVL-carrying phage, phi SLT (Staphylococcal Leukocytolytic Toxin) from a clinical isolate of S. aureus. phi SLT was able to lysogenize several clinical isolates of PVL-negative S. aureus strains as well as strain RN4220 at the conserved 29-bp sequence (attB) and all the lysogenized S. aureus strains had the ability to produce PVL. phi SLT had an elongated head of about 100 x 50 nm and a flexible tail of 400 nm long, that was quite different from phi PVL which had an isometric hexagonal head of about 60 nm diameter. The linear double-stranded (phi SLT genome comprised 42,942 bp with 29-bp attachment core sequences and contained 62 open reading frames. Only 6.4 kbp region containing lysis cassette, PVL genes, attP, integrase, and orf204 of phi SLT was identical to that of phi PVL, while other regions were different from those of phi PVL. Thus, it can be concluded that PVL genes are carried by different temperate phages, which have the same attachment site. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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