Christensen G D, Baddour L M, Simpson W A
Veterans Administration Medical Center, Memphis, Tennessee 38104.
Infect Immun. 1987 Dec;55(12):2870-7. doi: 10.1128/iai.55.12.2870-2877.1987.
Clinical studies performed by us and others have found an association between slime production and strains of coagulase-negative staphylococci that infect indwelling medical devices. By serial low-speed centrifugation of broth cultures we have isolated a stable, weakly adherent strain (RP62A-NA) from a strongly adherent, slime-producing, pathogenic strain of Staphylococcus epidermidis sensu stricto (RP62A, ATCC 35984). We obtained a second strain from RP62A-NA (RP62A-NAR) by serial subculture of glass-adherent cells of RP62A-NA. All three strains had the same pattern of biochemical reactions, antimicrobial susceptibilities, and plasmid analysis. Transmission electron micrograph sections stained with the mucopolysaccharide-specific stain alcian blue demonstrated that the adherent strains RP62A and RP62A-NAR were covered with an extracellular coat of polysaccharide-rich material. In contrast, the nonadherent RP62A-NA strain lacked this external coat. All three strains were used in a mouse model of foreign body infection and a rat model of catheter-induced infective endocarditis. The adherence characteristics of isolates of RP62A and RP62A-NA recovered from experimental animals were relatively stable, although we noted a slight but a significant increase in the adherence of RP62A-NA isolates recovered from the foreign body model. The adherence characteristics of RP62A-NAR isolates recovered from infected animals were variable; in general these isolates were less adherent than the laboratory strain of RP62A-NAR. In both models the 50% infective dose (calculated by the Reed and Muench method) was three times greater for the RP62A-NA strain than for the RP62A strain. The phenotypic expression of slime production is subject to both in vitro and in vivo variation and could play a role in the pathogenesis of foreign body infection.
我们和其他人进行的临床研究发现,黏液产生与感染植入式医疗设备的凝固酶阴性葡萄球菌菌株之间存在关联。通过对肉汤培养物进行连续低速离心,我们从表皮葡萄球菌狭义种(RP62A,ATCC 35984)的强黏附、产黏液、致病菌株中分离出了一种稳定的、弱黏附菌株(RP62A-NA)。我们通过对RP62A-NA的玻璃黏附细胞进行连续传代培养,从RP62A-NA获得了第二个菌株(RP62A-NAR)。所有这三个菌株具有相同的生化反应模式、抗菌药敏性和质粒分析结果。用黏多糖特异性染料阿尔辛蓝染色的透射电子显微镜切片显示,黏附菌株RP62A和RP62A-NAR覆盖着一层富含多糖的细胞外被膜。相比之下,非黏附性的RP62A-NA菌株缺乏这种外部被膜。所有这三个菌株都用于异物感染的小鼠模型和导管诱导的感染性心内膜炎的大鼠模型。从实验动物中回收的RP62A和RP62A-NA分离株的黏附特性相对稳定,尽管我们注意到从异物模型中回收的RP62A-NA分离株的黏附性有轻微但显著的增加。从感染动物中回收的RP62A-NAR分离株的黏附特性是可变的;一般来说,这些分离株的黏附性比RP62A-NAR的实验室菌株低。在两个模型中,RP62A-NA菌株的50%感染剂量(通过里德和门奇方法计算)比RP62A菌株大三倍。黏液产生的表型表达在体外和体内都存在变异,并且可能在异物感染的发病机制中起作用。