Offsetting virulence and antibiotic resistance costs by MRSA.

James Collins, Justine Rudkin, Mario Recker, Clarissa Pozzi, James P O'Gara, Ruth C Massey
Author Information
  1. James Collins: Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.

Abstract

The prevalence of diverse MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) types in both hospital and community settings is a major health problem worldwide. Here we compare hospital-acquired MRSAs with large type II SCCmec elements with those prevalent in both hospital and community settings with smaller type IV SCCmec elements. We find that the type II but not the type IV SCCmec element causes the bacteria to reduce their levels of costly toxin expression. We compare the relative growth rates of these MRSA types and show that the type II SCCmec carrying MRSAs are more affected than those carrying type IV elements and from this we hypothesize that offsetting the costs associated with antibiotic resistance and toxin expression is why the type II are confined to hospital environments where antibiotic use, the prevalence of immunocompromised individuals and vector-mediated transmission is high. In contrast, those MRSAs that are also successful in the community can maintain their high levels of toxin expression due to a lower fitness burden associated with the smaller SCCmec element.

Grants

  1. /Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

MeSH Term

Community-Acquired Infections
Cross Infection
DNA, Bacterial
Drug Resistance, Bacterial
Humans
Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
Staphylococcal Infections
Virulence
Virulence Factors

Chemicals

DNA, Bacterial
Virulence Factors

Word Cloud

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