Group A Streptococci from a Remote Community Have Novel Multilocus Genotypes but Share emm Types and Housekeeping Alleles with Isolates from Worldwide Sources
Group A streptococci (GAS) cause several human diseases that differentially affect distinct host populations. Genotypes were defined by multilocus sequence typing and emm typing for 137 organisms collected from individuals in a remote aboriginal island community in tropical Australia and compared wi...
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Published in | The Journal of infectious diseases Vol. 189; no. 4; pp. 717 - 723 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Chicago, IL
The University of Chicago Press
15.02.2004
University of Chicago Press Oxford University Press |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Group A streptococci (GAS) cause several human diseases that differentially affect distinct host populations. Genotypes were defined by multilocus sequence typing and emm typing for 137 organisms collected from individuals in a remote aboriginal island community in tropical Australia and compared with >200 isolates obtained from sources elsewhere in the world. The majority of aboriginal-derived isolates shared emm types and housekeeping alleles with GAS isolates recovered from outside Australia, but these emm types and alleles were in novel combinations. There were many examples in which isolates from aboriginal and non-Australian subjects shared the same emm type, but for ∼50% of emm types, the multilocus genotypes of isolates of the same emm type but from different regions were very different. A single emm type may typically define a single clone within the United States and on the remote island that is the focus of this study, but in many cases, these clones will be different, and this finding has implications for attempts to make global associations between emm types and certain disease manifestations. |
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Bibliography: | istex:4B03ECAA98C660939E284297CEC8EA75D7410BFE Presented in part: InternationalWorkshop on Multilocus Sequence Typing, Cambridge, United Kingdom, 1–3 December 2002; Molecular Epidemiology and Evolutionary Genetics of Infectious Disease Meeting, Paris, 21–25 July 2002; 6th American Society for Microbiology Meeting on Streptococcal Genetics, Asheville, North Carolina, 14–17 April 2002. ark:/67375/HXZ-Z082X75V-6 ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0022-1899 1537-6613 |
DOI: | 10.1086/381452 |