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Characterization of Genetic and Phenotypic Diversity of Invasive Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae

Authors :
Erwin, Alice L.
Nelson, Kevin L.
Mhlanga-Mutangadura, Tendai
Bonthuis, Paul J.
Geelhood, Jennifer L.
Morlin, Gregory
Unrath, William C. T.
Campos, Jose
Crook, Derrick W.
Farley, Monica M.
Henderson, Frederick W.
Jacobs, Richard F.
Mühlemann, Kathrin
Satola, Sarah W.
van Alphen, Loek
Golomb, Miriam
Smith, Arnold L.
Source :
Infection and Immunity; September 2005, Vol. 73 Issue: 9 p5853-5863, 11p
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

The ability of unencapsulated (nontypeable) Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) to cause systemic disease in healthy children has been recognized only in the past decade. To determine the extent of similarity among invasive nontypeable isolates, we compared strain R2866 with 16 additional NTHi isolates from blood and spinal fluid, 17 nasopharyngeal or throat isolates from healthy children, and 19 isolates from middle ear aspirates. The strains were evaluated for the presence of several genetic loci that affect bacterial surface structures and for biochemical reactions that are known to differ among H. influenzae strains. Eight strains, including four blood isolates, shared several properties with R2866: they were biotype V (indole and ornithine decarboxylase positive, urease negative), contained sequence from the adhesin gene hia, and lacked a genetic island flanked by the infA and ksgA genes. Multilocus sequence typing showed that most biotype V isolates belonged to the same phylogenetic cluster as strain R2866. When present, the infA-ksgA island contains lipopolysaccharide biosynthetic genes, either lic2B and lic2C or homologs of the losA and losB genes described for Haemophilus ducreyi. The island was found in most nasopharyngeal and otitis isolates but was absent from 40% of invasive isolates. Overall, the 33 hmw-negative isolates were much more likely than hmw-containing isolates to have tryptophanase, ornithine decarboxylase, or lysine decarboxylase activity or to contain the hif genes. We conclude (i) that invasive isolates are genetically and phenotypically diverse and (ii) that certain genetic loci of NTHi are frequently found in association among NTHi strains.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00199567 and 10985522
Volume :
73
Issue :
9
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Infection and Immunity
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs7629262