Department of Microbiology, The Mount Sinai Hospital, One Gustave L. Levy Place, 10029, New York, New York, USA.
Microb Ecol. 1982 Dec;8(4):335-46. doi: 10.1007/BF02010673.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a free-living bacterial species, is a major nosocomial pathogen, especially of compromised patients within medical facilities. Numerous factors contribute to the ecological selection of this bacterial species within the hospital environment, among which the expression of newly acquired or quiescent enzymatic capability seems par-amount. The emergence of pathogenic strains ofP. aeruginosa appears to be gradual, embodying a transition of strains from their natural aquatic environment, to establishing inanimate (hospital) and animate (human) reservoirs. In this stepwise transition, subsets ofP. aeruginosa may evolve which express a survival trait, for example, gentamicin resistance, but concomitantly suffer a loss of invasive potential. In this study,P. aeruginosa strains from natural [22], hospital [11], and stool [17] sources were evaluated for their physiological and exoenzymatic activity and compared with gentamicin-resistantP. aeruginosa (GRPA) strains [49] of clinical origin. As a whole, environmental and hospital isolates showed reduced enzymatic potential, for example, frequency of production of elastase, lipase, deoxyribonuclease, and pyocyanin production. Human fecal isolates most closely resembled the prototype of human invasiveP. aeruginosa in their gentamicin susceptibility (95%) and increased frequencies of exoenzymes, including elastase production. On the other hand, GRPA were frequently apyocyanogenic (9/49), lacked extracellular enzymes correlated with pathogenicity, and were rarely isolated from systemic sites. When encountered, these strains appeared to represent colonization of a body site rather than incitants of overt infection. As a "subset" ofP. aeruginosa, gentamicin resistance was seen predominantly among serotype 11 strains, and encountered most frequently from patients with localized urinary tract infections.
铜绿假单胞菌是一种自由生活的细菌物种,是一种主要的医院病原体,特别是在医疗机构中身体虚弱的患者。许多因素导致这种细菌在医院环境中具有生态选择性,其中新获得或休眠酶能力的表达似乎是最重要的。致病菌株的出现似乎是逐渐的,体现了菌株从其自然水生环境向无生命(医院)和有生命(人类)储层的转变。在这个逐步转变中,铜绿假单胞菌的亚群可能会进化出一种生存特性,例如庆大霉素耐药性,但同时也会失去侵袭性潜力。在这项研究中,评估了来自天然[22]、医院[11]和粪便[17]来源的铜绿假单胞菌菌株的生理和外酶活性,并将其与临床来源的庆大霉素耐药铜绿假单胞菌(GRPA)菌株[49]进行了比较。总的来说,环境和医院分离株显示出降低的酶潜能,例如弹性蛋白酶、脂肪酶、脱氧核糖核酸酶和绿脓菌素的产生频率。人类粪便分离株在庆大霉素敏感性(95%)和外酶产生频率增加方面最接近人类侵袭性铜绿假单胞菌的原型,包括弹性蛋白酶的产生。另一方面,GRPA 通常无绿脓菌素生成(9/49),缺乏与致病性相关的细胞外酶,很少从全身部位分离出来。当遇到这些菌株时,它们似乎代表身体部位的定植,而不是明显感染的诱因。作为铜绿假单胞菌的一个“亚群”,庆大霉素耐药性主要见于血清型 11 菌株,最常从患有局部尿路感染的患者中分离出来。