* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Spontaneous Mutations in the CsrRS Two
Saethre–Chotzen syndrome wikipedia , lookup
Nutriepigenomics wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics of neurodegenerative diseases wikipedia , lookup
Therapeutic gene modulation wikipedia , lookup
Designer baby wikipedia , lookup
Genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis wikipedia , lookup
Oncogenomics wikipedia , lookup
Public health genomics wikipedia , lookup
Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Site-specific recombinase technology wikipedia , lookup
Microevolution wikipedia , lookup
History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Pathogenomics wikipedia , lookup
No-SCAR (Scarless Cas9 Assisted Recombineering) Genome Editing wikipedia , lookup
1043 Spontaneous Mutations in the CsrRS Two-Component Regulatory System of Streptococcus pyogenes Result in Enhanced Virulence in a Murine Model of Skin and Soft Tissue Infection N. Cary Engleberg,1,2 Andrew Heath,1 Alita Miller,2,3 Clarise Rivera,2 and Victor J. DiRita2,3 Departments of 1Internal Medicine and 2Microbiology and Immunology and 3Unit for Laboratory Animal Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor CsrS/CsrR is a 2-component system in Streptococcus pyogenes that negatively regulates hyaluronic capsule and several exotoxins. To detect spontaneous mutations in csrRS, mucoid and large colony variants of M1 strain MGAS166 were isolated from experimental murine skin infections. By use of complementation with a csrRS+ plasmid, relevant mutations were also detected in 7 of 12 human clinical isolates. The presence of spontaneous mutants in mouse infection was associated with larger, more necrotic lesions. Most spontaneous changes in CsrR resulted from single amino acid substitutions, whereas most csrS mutations were frameshift or nonsense mutations. In 2 instances, IS1548 insertions were found in csrS. Experimental inoculation of mixtures of wild-type (wt) and csrRS2 bacteria yielded larger, more necrotic lesions than did either strain at twice the inoculum, which suggests that these variants may exhibit pathogenic synergy. Spontaneous emergence of csrRS2 mutants in vivo enhances the virulence of wt bacteria and increases severity of murine skin infection. Skin and soft tissue infections with Streptococcus pyogenes may be life-threatening or relatively benign [1, 2]. Differences in the aggressiveness of these infections may be partly explained by host factors, strain characteristics, or portal of entry. However, none of these explanations fully accounts for the variation in outcome among infected persons. Although the very young and the very old have higher rates of invasive streptococcal disease, most cases occur among older children and adults !65 years old [3, 4]. Various states of immunocompromise and underlying diseases increase the risk of severe infection (i.e., necrotizing fasciitis); however, aggressively invasive cases also are common among healthy persons with normal immunity. Similarly, certain clones of S. pyogenes have been associated with worldwide resurgence of invasive streptococcal disease, but such strains do not account for all cases, nor do they always cause severe disease [5–10]. One might speculate that the site and depth of inoculation would influence the type and progress Received 16 October 2000; revised 28 December 2000; electronically published 1 March 2001. Presented in part: American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Chicago, June 1999 (session 187); 39th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, San Francisco, September 1999 (abstract 141B). Financial support: National Institutes of Health (grants RO1-141682 to N.C.E, GM-20420 to A.M., and RR-00042 for technical assistance). C.R. is supported by a Rackham minority fellowship. Reprints or correspondence: Dr. N. Cary Engleberg, Div. of Infectious Diseases, Dept. of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Hospitals, 3116B Taubman Center, Box 0378, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 (cengleb@ umich.edu). The Journal of Infectious Diseases 2001; 183:1043–54 q 2001 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. 0022-1899/2001/18307-0008$02.00 of skin infection; however, blunt trauma is associated with necrotizing fasciitis as often as penetrating trauma [11]. Therefore, these factors account for some of the variation in severity and outcome of streptococcal skin and soft tissue infection, but they do not explain it fully. Control of several streptococcal virulence factors is mediated by a 2-component regulatory system designated CsrR/CsrS (capsule synthesis regulation) [12–15]. This system consists of a membrane-spanning sensor kinase (CsrS) and a DNA-binding cytoplasmic protein (CsrR). When it is phosphorylated, CsrR binds upstream of certain genes and represses transcription [13]. The CsrR-repressed genes include those that encode the synthesis of hyaluronic acid capsule, streptolysin S (SLS), pyrogenic exotoxin B (SpeB), and streptokinase [14, 15]. Because CsrR is a transcriptional repressor, mutants that affect the expression or integrity of this protein result in enhanced expression of the regulated genes. Thus, csrR mutants are highly mucoid and produce increased SLS activity and SpeB protein. In a mouse model of skin and soft tissue infection, such strains are significantly more likely than the CsrR1 parental strains from which they are derived to produce rapidly enlarging necrotic skin lesions and lethality [12, 15]. Similarly, a large, sitedirected deletion of csrS in 1 clinical isolate resulted in a phenotype of large colony (LC) size in response to 5% CO2 atmosphere [16]. Colonies grown under these conditions also appear to be more mucoid but do not have increased amounts of hyaluronic acid to account for this glossy appearance (authors’ unpublished data). Although the biologic basis for this phenotype is not known, skin inoculation with this LC strain resulted in rapidly expanding ischemic lesions that were also associated with enhanced mortality. 1044 Engleberg et al. The above observations were made with directed mutations and transposon insertions in clinical strains. We reasoned that a similar enhancement of streptococcal virulence might also occur as a result of spontaneous mutations in csrR or csrS. Here we report the results of a study in a mouse model. Materials and Methods Bacterial strains. Streptococcal strains used for this study were derived from wild-type (wt) strain MGAS166 (table 1). Strains were grown in Todd-Hewitt broth supplemented with 0.2% yeast extract (THY broth; Difco) or on Todd-Hewitt yeast extract agar (THYA) plates (Difco). In certain experiments, antibiotic-resistant streptococci were grown on selective agar media containing 100 mg/mL spectinomycin or streptomycin (Sigma). Strain MGAS166 is a streptomycin-resistant type M1 isolate from a case of invasive streptococcal disease that has a matte colonial appearance when grown on THYA [5]. Strain SBmuc7 is a derivative of MGAS166 that has an insertion of Tn916 immediately upstream of csrR [15]. Strain UMAA2392 is a site-directed mutant of MGAS166 that has both a large in-frame deletion of csrR and a substitution of ACG for ATG as the start codon in the csrS gene [15]. Strain UMAA2690 is a site-directed mutant that has a large deletion of the csrS gene and an intact copy of csrR [16]. SBmuc7 and UMAA2392 both are constitutively mucoid and produce rapidly enlarging dermonecrotic lesions in the mouse model described below. UMAA2690 has the LC phenotype when grown on THYA in 5% CO2 and produces rapidly enlarging dermal ischemia in the mouse model. To investigate expression of capsular synthesis genes, we constructed a reporter plasmid, phas-phoZ, which carries the first 200 Table 1. JID 2001;183 (1 April) bp of the hasA gene fused to alkaline phosphatase. This plasmid was generated from vector pABG-5 [17] by inserting the hasA promoter upstream of a truncated copy of the phoZ gene that lacks its promoter and signal sequence. The hasA gene fragment includes the 235 and 210 sequences that are reportedly protected by CsrR in DNA footprinting experiments [13]. As a negative control, we used a derivative of pABG-5 that contains a rofA-phoZ transcriptional fusion [17] (pABG-5 and the rofA-phoZ derivative were provided by M. Caparon, Washington University, St. Louis). Capsuledeficient strains used in these experiments included UMAA2497, a derivative of MGAS166 that has an in-frame deletion between the capsular synthesis genes, and hasA, hasB, and UMAA2526, a nonencapsulated derivative of CsrRS mutant UMAA2392 containing the same hasAB deletion as UMAA2497 [15]. Assays for bacterial products in culture. Uronic acid levels in culture supernates were quantified by using the stains-all method, as described elsewhere [15]. Phosphatase activity in 200 mL of supernate samples was measured by mixing with 800 mL of 1 M Tris (pH 9.5) and 200 mL of p-nitrophenyl phosphate (10 mg/mL). The assay mixture was incubated at room temperature until a yellow color developed. The reactions were stopped by the addition of 200 mL of KH2PO4, and absorbance was read at OD420. Isolation and analysis of spontaneous CsrRS mutants. Animal isolates were screened for mutations in csrR or csrS by growth on THYA in air and 5% CO2. Isolates that produced larger or more mucoid colonies were selected for further study. Some isolates were subjected to DNA sequencing of the entire csrRS locus. This was accomplished by amplification of 2 overlapping segments (1.4 kb and 1.9 kb) of the 2.3-kb locus by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with Taq polymerase. Sequencing was done by the University of Michigan Molecular Biology Core Laboratory. A larger number of variant strains was screened for csrRS mu- Bacterial strains used in this study. Designation Description Source MGAS166 SBmuc7 UMAA2392 Type M1 clinical isolate Tn916::csrR MGAS166, DcsrR, csrS2 (spontaneous mutation of the initiation codon from ATG to ACG) MGAS166, DcsrS MGAS166, DhasAB UMAA2392, DhasAB a Clinical isolate; blood a Clinical isolate; surgical wound a Clinical isolate; necrotic skin lesion Clinical isolate; blood Clinical isolate; blood Clinical isolate; tissue source unknown a Clinical isolate; wound a Clinical isolate; tissue source unknown a Clinical isolate; wound Clinical isolate; blood Clinical isolate; blood Clinical isolate; subdural empyema Clinical isolate; blood Clinical isolate; necrotic skin lesion a Clinical isolate; wound Clinical isolate; tissue source unknown [5] [15] [15] UMAA2990 UMAA2497 UMAA2526 UMAA2254 UMAA2259 UMAA2712 UMAA2713 UMAA2714 UMAA2715 UMAA2716 UMAA2717 UMAA2718 UMAA2719 UMAA2720 UMAA2721 UMAA2722 UMAA2723 UMAA2724 UMAA2725 a b [16] [15] [15] b Toronto, Canada b Toronto, Canada Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Ann Arbor, MI Colony size or mucoidy decreased after transformation with pASH2477. Kindly provided by Don Low (University of Toronto). JID 2001;183 (1 April) Spontaneous CsrR/CsrS Mutants of S. pyogenes tations by complementation analysis with pASH2477. This plasmid is a derivative of spectinomycin-resistant broad host-range vector pJRS525 that contains the entire csrRS locus, including its promoter, inserted into the multiple cloning site (figure 1A) [15, 18]. For electroporation with either plasmid, bacteria were grown for ∼2 h in 30 mL of THY broth with 0.2 M glycine and hyaluronidase (0.1 mg/ mL to an OD600 of 0.1). The bacteria were recovered by centrifugation at 47C, were washed twice in 5 mL of 15% glycerol, and were resuspended in 0.5 mL of 15% glycerol. We added 0.2 mL of this bacterial suspension to 5–10 mg of DNA, which was electroporated at 1.75 kV (capacitance, 25 mF; resistance, 400 ohms) in a gene pulser with pulse controller (Bio-Rad). The mixture then was diluted in 5 mL of THY broth and was incubated on ice for 45 min and at 307C for 2 h. Bacteria were pelleted, were resuspended in 0.75 mL, and were plated on THYA with spectinomycin. Spectinomycin-resistant transformants that reverted to a small matte colonial morphology were cured by passage on nonselective media to confirm a reversion to the original phenotype after loss of the plasmid. Isolates obtained from invasive streptococcal infection of humans also were screened by plasmid complementation and curing, to determine whether they had a csrRS-repressible phenotype. All strains were compared on media incubated in air and in 5% CO2. We estimated the approximate copy number of pASH2477 in S. pyogenes by PCR analysis. A series of 2-fold dilutions of total DNA extracted from UMAA2392 (pASH2477) was amplified with a primer that binds 416 bp upstream of the csrR initiation codon (50CTTGCTATTCCGCTACAGG-30) and with one that binds 308 bp downstream of the csrR termination codon (50-CCTAATGACTCGACTGCCCTTTCT-30). This primer pair yields 1405-bp amplicons from the intact csrR gene on the plasmid and 966-bp amplicons from the DcsrR gene on the chromosome of UMAA2392. Comparison of the intensity of ethidium bromide staining of these 2 bands in the dilutional series of DNA allowed for estimation of the plasmid copy number. Mouse model of skin and soft tissue infection. Streptococci were harvested at midlog phase (OD600 p 0.6–0.7) and were diluted in THY broth to produce various inocula in a 100-mL bacterial suspension. The inoculum was injected subcutaneously into the right flank of hairless 4-week-old male crl:SKH1(hrhr) Br mice (Charles River), as described elsewhere [19]. Where noted, Cytodex beads (Sigma-Aldrich) were mixed with the inoculum immediately before injection. This manipulation enhances the virulence of the wt strain [19]. Mice were weighed before inoculation and every 24 h thereafter. Total lesions (induration, abscess, ulcer, and erythema) and any regions of necrosis were measured daily, and the areas were calculated by using the equation area p p(L 3 W )/4 , where L is the long axis and W is the short axis of the lesion. Edema was noted in some animals but was not measured separately. Mice that were immobilized by large lesions were killed and were counted as lethal outcomes of infection. In experiments that required quantitation of streptococci from wounds, the mice were killed, and a wide area surrounding the lesion was excised and was homogenized in PBS (pH 7.4) by using a 7-mL tissue grinder (Tenbroek Pyrex). Aliquots were plated at 1045 Figure 1. Complementation of csrRS by pASH2477. A, Map of pASH2477. White- and black-filled lines, vector sequences derived from pJRS525; heavy solid lines and arrows, inserted csrRS locus. For reference, relative position of DcsrR positioned on chromosome of strain UMAA2392 is indicated by dotted brackets adjacent to intact csrR gene on plasmid map. P1 and P2 indicate where primers used for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis hybridize. B, PCR products of 2-fold dilutions of total DNA from UMAA2392 (pASH2477). Amplicons from intact plasmid csrR gene (∼1.4-kb band); ∼1-kb band contains amplicons from chromosomal DcsrR gene. Intensity of each 1-kb band is comparable to that of 1.4-kb band at next dilution, which suggests that there are ∼2–4 copies of the plasmid gene for each chromosomal copy (after correction for ∼50% increase in band intensity because of amplicon length). C, Growth curves of indicated streptococcal strains in Todd-Hewitt yeast broth in air. Samples taken at 6.7 h (f) were analyzed for bacterial cell-associated uronic acid (inset). various dilutions on THYA with streptomycin, and streptococcal colonies were counted. Results Complementation of mutations in csrRS with pASH2477. Bacteria suspected of having a significant mutation in the csrRS locus were electroporated with pASH2477 (csrRS1) and were examined for suppression of a mucoid or LC phenotype. To demonstrate that plasmid complementation suppresses csrR mutations in a physiologic manner, we estimated the plasmid 1046 Engleberg et al. copy number and measured uronic acid levels at the end of the exponential phase. By comparing the intensity of ethidium bromide–stained PCR amplicons derived from the chromosomal and plasmid copies of csrR, we were able to estimate copy number of pASH2477 as 2–4 copies per bacterial cell (figure 1B). To confirm that the suppression of the mucoid phenotype by pASH2477 is physiologic, we compared total uronic acid levels from MGAS166 and UMAA2392 (pASH2477). At the end of the exponential phase, production of uronic acid by the complemented mutant was near (but not less than) the wt level (figure 1C, inset). Insertion of pASH2477 into MGAS166 produced no change in the colony appearance or size, compared with MGAS166 that carry the vector plasmid (figure 2). Taken together, these findings confirm that pASH2477 does not suppress capsule synthesis to a greater degree than does a single intact copy of csrRS on the chromosome. Emergence of spontaneous csrRS mutations. Our initial hypothesis that csrRS mutations might occur spontaneously was JID 2001;183 (1 April) supported by finding rare mucoid streptococcal colonies in cultures from mice infected with strain MGAS166. Eight such isolates were saved: 6 were from blood or spleen tissue of mice that had been infected with MGAS166 and Cytodex, one was a mucoid variant from a persistent streptococcal abscess, and one was a rare mucoid colony that appeared on routine passage of strain MGAS166 on THYA. DNA sequencing of the entire csrRS locus in these 8 strains showed that all had alterations in either csrR or csrS (the first 8 strains listed in table 2). In each strain, the variant phenotype (constitutive mucoid or LC) corresponded with the alterations in csrR or csrS, respectively. In 2 of the 4 csrS mutants, the deletion of thymidine residues occurred within a string of thymidines (i.e., TTTTTTTTT at nt 75–83 of the open-reading frame). A third mutation involved the spontaneous deletion of a thymidine at nt 492 from the sequence TATA(T)TCTAAT. The fourth csrS mutation occurred as a result of an insertion of IS1548 at nt 345. All these mutations led to early termination of CsrS translation. All 4 mutants were Figure 2. Complementation of spontaneous csrRS mutants with pASH2477 (csrRS1). Upper panels, Portions of nonselective Todd-Hewitt yeast extract agar plates streaked with representative variant strains. Spontaneous constitutive mucoid variant UMAA2904 (left) and spontaneous large colony variant UMAA2899 (right) were grown in 5% CO2 with pASH2477-transformed derivative and plasmid-cured spectinomycin-sensitive derivative of transformant. Note smaller size and matte appearance of pASH2477 transformant of both strains. As controls, MGAS166 (wild type) and UMAA2392 (CsrRS2) are shown with their respective pASH2477-transformed and pJRS525-transformed derivatives (lower panels). Neither plasmid affected the appearance of MGAS166. Although pASH2477 complemented the mucoidy of UMAA2392, the vector pJRS525 had no effect on the appearance of this constitutive mucoid strain. These controls confirm that the presence of the csrRS locus suppresses the variant phenotype in the spontaneous mutants. JID 2001;183 (1 April) Table 2. Spontaneous CsrR/CsrS Mutants of S. pyogenes 1047 Alterations in DNA sequence of csrRS among variant isolates of MGAS166. a Isolate no. Gene Type of mutation Consequence of mutation UMAA2207 UMAA2209 UMAA2210 UMAA2211 UMAA2057 UMAA2058 UMAA2088 UMAA2345 csrS csrS csrS csrS csrR csrR csrR csrR Frameshift (DT between nt 76 and 83) Frameshift (DT at nt 492) IS1548 insertion at nt 342 Frameshift (DT between nt 76 and 83) Missense Missense Missense Deletion of 30 nt bases UMAA2749 UMAA2752 UMAA2759 UMAA2760 UMAA2762 UMAA2763 UMAA2764 UMAA2765 UMAA2767 UMAA2880 UMAA2882 UMAA2887 UMAA2875, UMAA2877, UMAA2878, UMAA2881, and UMAA2884 csrR csrS csrS csrS csrS csrR csrS csrR csrS csrS csrS csrS csrS Nonsense Missense Frameshift (DAA at nt 321) IS1548 insertion (detected by PCR) Frameshift (DGAAAA at nt 218) Missense None (sequence incomplete) Nonsense Nonsense Missense Frameshift (insertion of GC at nt 1136) Missense Frameshift (insertion of T at nt 1105) Early termination after aa residue 35 Early termination after aa residue 181 Insertional inactivation Early termination after aa residue 35 R203S R94C M86V Deletion of aa 211–220 (W1 region of DNA binding domain) E159ochre M260T Early termination Early termination Early termination G204D E159ochre E159ochre S254F Early termination R241S Early termination Complemented by pASH2477 Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes ND Yes Yes Yes ND ND ND ND ND Yes Yes ND No ND NOTE. aa, Amino acid; ND, not done; nt, nucleotide; PCR, polymerase chain reaction. a Nucleotide residues in csrS are numbered beginning at first base of start codon. restored to the wt, nonencapsulated (matte colony) phenotype by introduction of pASH2477 (csrRS1) by electroporation. To assess the virulence potential of these mutants, 3 spontaneous variants were selected for mouse inoculation experiments. These 3 strains were compared with the wt MGAS166 and a defined CsrRS mutant. The results of these experiments confirmed that the spontaneous mutants produced enhanced dermonecrosis (table 3). The spontaneous csrR mutants produced highly destructive lesions identical to those induced by the sitedirected CsrRS mutant. The appearance of the lesions produced by the csrS mutant (thymidine deletion) was equivalent to that previously observed with another strain carrying a large sitedirected deletion in csrS. Infection with these mutants causes a distinctive spreading dermal ischemia with late necrosis and sloughing of the skin, but the ultimate frequency of dermonecrosis is similar to that observed with csrR mutants [16]. To determine how frequently csrR or csrS mutants emerge during infection, we conducted a prospective study of 10 mice after infection with 3 3 10 6 cfu of MGAS166 (table 4). Five mice were killed on day 2 because of advanced lesions; the other 5 were killed on day 5. Table 4 shows the sizes of the lesions that developed in these animals, the frequency of bacteremic isolates, and the occurrence of mucoid strains. In this experiment, only those mice that developed necrotic lesions were bacteremic. Larger lesions occurred among animals with mucoid isolates from either the wound or blood. The largest lesion was seen in the animal with the highest frequency of variant isolates from the lesion. Finally, 5 of the 6 animals that eventually developed necrosis had mucoid isolates taken from either the lesion or blood. None of the 4 animals that did not develop necrosis had mucoid isolates taken from any site (P p .05, Fisher’s exact test, 2-tailed). In all 5 mice with mucoid isolates, there were isolates with the LC phenotype, which is consistent with csrS mutation, and 3 of these mice also had isolates with constitutive mucoidy, which is consistent with csrR mutation. We demonstrated an IS1548 insertion in csrS in 1 LC isolate (table 2). In a subsequent experiment, LC isolates were obtained from all 8 of 8 necrotic wounds that were cultured 72 h after inoculation. Three animals with very large necrotic wounds were killed before 72 h, and cultures were not done. Five of these wounds had isolates with the identical frameshift mutation csrS (an insertion of thymidine at nt 1106), which suggests that this mutation arose in broth culture before inoculation. Three other unique csrS mutations were observed in isolates from 3 other animals—frameshift due to insertion of GC at nt 1137, missense resulting in an S254F substitution, and missense resulting in an R241S substitution (table 2). Electroporation of pASH2477 suppressed the LC phenotype of the S254F mutant strain but not the R241S mutant strain; consequently, the significance of the latter mutation remains uncertain. The strain may carry an additional mutation affecting the phenotype. In a final experiment, mucoid or LC variants of MGAS166 were obtained from 16 mice with necrotic lesions. Five mice had only LC variants, 6 had constitutive mucoidy, and 5 had isolates with both phenotypes. Three of the constitutive and 3 of the LC strains were transformed with pASH2477; in all but 1 (an LC isolate), the variant phenotype was suppressed by the presence of the plasmid and was returned after curing. Figure 2 shows representative isolates. 1048 Engleberg et al. Table 3. Lesion type and lethality in dermal infections of mice with MGAS166 and spontaneous mutants. Strain MGAS166 (wt) UMAA2392 (DcsrRS2) UMAA2057 UMAA2058 UMAA2211 Colony phenotype Total no. Matte Mucoid Mucoid Mucoid Large colony 5 5 5 5 5 No. with No. with No. lesions skin necrosis died 3 5 5 5 5 0 5 5 5 4 0 4 4 2 1 Spontaneous csrR mutation in a human clinical isolate. Since the csrRS sequences of nonisogenic streptococcal strains may have silent or conservative substitutions, we examined clinical isolates by complementation with pASH2477, to determine whether they possess a functional csrRS locus. A panel of 16 isolates from cases of invasive human infections was transformed with the plasmid and was compared with respect to colony size and appearance after growth in CO2. After transformation, 7 of these isolates yielded smaller colonies; all 7 yielded larger colonies again when the plasmid was cured. These 7 strains are indicated in table 1. One strain, UMAA2716, had a dramatic loss of its highly mucoid appearance when the plasmid was present, and curing of the plasmid restored abundant capsule production (figure 3). DNA sequence analysis of this isolate showed that the csrRS locus differs from that of MGAS166 by substitutions of 4 nt. Two substitutions in csrS and 1 in csrR do not alter the amino acid sequence. One substitution in csrR (CrT) predicts a substitution of cysteine for arginine at position 144 in CsrR (i.e., R144C). These findings suggest that nearly half the clinical isolates lack CsrR or CsrS activity and that 1 of the 12 carries a variant csrR associated with abundant mucoidy. Enhancement of virulence by coincident populations of csrR or csrS mutants. The previous experiments demonstrate that mouse skin infection enriches for spontaneous mutations in both csrR and csrS and that similar strains can be found in invasive human infections as well. The results in table 3 suggest that the emergence of spontaneous mucoid and LC variant strains (probably csrR or csrS mutants) are associated with more dermonecrosis and a higher frequency of bacteremia. However, these isolates usually comprise a relatively small proportion of the total streptococcal population in the infected animals. To explain the severity of the lesions, we hypothesized that the mutant population may facilitate the growth of the wt strain in vivo and that enhanced growth of the wt strain may facilitate the formation of lesions. All the currently recognized CsrRS-regulated gene products are related to the expression of secreted substances (i.e., capsule and exoproteins). With respect to pathogenesis, these bacterial products presumably exert their primary action in the extracellular space in vivo. Therefore, we considered the possibility that enhanced production of these secreted products by a population of csrR or csrS mutants might substitute for production that JID 2001;183 (1 April) remains repressed by CsrRS during infection with the wt strain. We hypothesized that a mixed infection with equivalent numbers of wt and mutant bacteria would enhance the survival and growth of the wt strain in vivo. Groups of animals were injected subcutaneously with either 106 cfu of MGAS166 or a mixture of 106 cfu of wt and 106 cfu of strain SBmuc7 (csrR::Tn916). The transposon in strain SBmuc7 allows the 2 coinoculated strains to be distinguished on antibiotic-containing media. At 48 h, lesions from the coinoculated animals and a comparable area of skin from the animals that received only the wt strain were excised, were homogenized in a tissue grinder, and were cultured quantitatively on media with streptomycin or with streptomycin and tetracycline. We calculated the log-fold increase in bacteria by using 106 as the starting quantity of each population. The results of the experiment, shown in figure 4, demonstrate a 3.5log increase in the growth of the wt strain in vivo when coinoculated with a csrR mutant. When inoculated alone, the recovery of MGAS166 from areas of minimal erythema at the site of inoculation showed a 1 log decrease in colony-forming units. To determine whether the csrR mutant exerts a systemic effect in the mouse that permits growth of the wt, we inoculated MGAS166 (wt) and strain SBmuc7 separately into opposite flanks of the same mouse (n p 6) and together in the same site in another set of 6 mice. Lesions developed in all 6 mice that received the mixed inoculum and at the site of SBmuc7 inoculation in those mice in which inocula were separated. No lesions developed at sites where MGAS166 was inoculated alone. This experiment demonstrates that the growth enhancement effect is purely a local phenomenon and not a systemic effect of the mutant. Given this local growth enhancement, we were interested in Table 4. Spontaneous variant isolates of Streptococcus pyogenes MGAS166 obtained from infected mice inoculated with 3 3 106 cfu. Area, mm2 Lesion, isolate no. Necrosis UMAA2749 UMAA2752 Necrosis Not viable Abscess Necrosis Necrosis UMAA2759 UMAA2760 Necrosis UMAA2762 UMAA2763 Abscess UMAA2764 None Abscess Necrosis UMAA2765 NOTE. Cultures Total Necrosis Lesion Blood 232 153 20% Mucoid Matte Spleen 10% LC 170 126 151 31 — 28 3% Mucoid Matte Matte Matte Neg Matte 141 141 Matte LC Neg Neg Matte LC 113 3 50% LC Rare mucoid Neg Neg 66 — 88 — — — Rare LC Neg Matte Neg Neg Neg Neg Neg Neg 170 25 Mucoid NT NT LC, large colony; Neg, negative; NT, not tested. JID 2001;183 (1 April) Spontaneous CsrR/CsrS Mutants of S. pyogenes 1049 Figure 3. Complementation of mucoid human clinical isolates with pASH2477 (csrRS1). Isolates were transformed with either pASH2477 or vector plasmid, pJRS525, and were grown on adjacent sectors of Todd-Hewitt yeast extract agar plates containing spectinomycin in 5% CO2. Strain UMAA2716 was a highly mucoid isolate that became matte when pASH2477 was introduced (upper left); strain appearance was unchanged by transformation with pJRS525. Clinical isolate UMAA2723 did not change colonial morphology with either plasmid (upper right). Both strains also were plated on nonselective media with respective pASH2477-transformed derivative and a spectinomycin-sensitive cured derivative (lower panels). This experiment confirms that the matte appearance of UMAA2716 is dependent on the persistence of pASH2477. Some spontaneous curing of pASH2477 occurred on nonselective media and produced occasional mucoid colonies among a lawn of matte colonies (left sector, lower left panel). determining whether the presence of a subpopulation of a csrR or csrS mutant in an infection with predominantly wt bacteria would produce a synergistic increase in virulence. To address this question, we designed a checkerboard synergy experiment. From preliminary experiments, we knew that the wt strain begins to yield necrotic lesions with inocula between 106 and 107 cfu, whereas the csrR mutant strain SBmuc7 produces necrosis at inocula of 105–106 cfu. Consequently, these 2 strains were grown to midexponential phase, and suspensions were prepared containing 4 dilutions of each strain (i.e., 8 3 10 6, 4 3 10 6, 2 3 10 6, and 1 3 10 6 cfu per inoculum of MGAS166 and 8 3 10 5, 4 3 10 5, 2 3 10 5, and 1 3 10 5 cfu per inoculum of SBmuc7) and mixtures of these inocula in various combinations. Each inoculum preparation then was injected subcutaneously into groups of 5 mice. We examined the mice at 24 and 48 h to measure the total lesion size and the presence and size of any dermonecrosis. Results are shown in figure 5. Certain combinations of strain MGAS166 and a csrR mutant produce more necrotic lesions than twice the inoculum of either strain alone. This was particularly so at the lowest inoculum in which the strains were given in a 10:1 ratio (wt:mutant). The total size of lesions (figure 5) and the area of necrosis (data not shown) were also greater in certain coinfections than in larger inocula of either strain alone. Mice with no lesions or no necrosis were included in the calculation of the mean as zeros. This experiment was repeated with similar results. In brief, inoculation of MGAS166 and SBmuc7 at a 10:1 ratio yielded more necrotic lesions at 24 h (3 of 5) than did a 2-fold larger inoculum of either MGAS166 alone (0 of 5) or SBmuc7 alone (2 of 5). In a similar experiment, we compared a DcsrS mutant, UMAA2690, with the wt in a similar array of combinations. No differences were noted when the strains were combined. However, as in the experiment depicted in table 4, we discovered that most animals inoculated with MGAS166 alone that developed necrotic lesions had LC variants isolated from their wounds, which is consistent with spontaneous csrS mutants (table 1). Several spontaneous mutants were complemented by 1050 Engleberg et al. Figure 4. Recovery of MGAS166 (wild type) from murine skin lesions after inoculation alone or with csrR mutant. V, Recovery of MGAS166 from lesions after inoculation alone; v, recovery of MGAS166 from lesions after mixed inoculation (1:1) with SBmuc7; m, recovery of SBmuc7 from same mixed infections. transformation with pASH2477 and lost the LC phenotype, which suggests that they are spontaneous csrR or csrS mutants. Signaling between CsrR mutant and wt bacteria. To investigate mechanisms to explain the enhanced growth and apparent pathogenicity of wt bacteria during coinfection with CsrRS mutants, we focused on the genes that encode capsular synthesis. A reporter plasmid expressing the streptococcal gene for alkaline phosphatase under the control of the hasA promoter (phas-phoZ) was introduced into the wt strain MGAS166 and its DhasAB derivative, UMAA2497. Overnight cultures of these indicator strains were mixed at a 10:1 ratio (OD600 p 0.05) with overnight cultures of various reporterless strains (OD600 p 0.005 ) and were grown in THY broth at 377C for 1–2 h (to OD600 p 0.4–0.5). Culture supernates were analyzed for PhoZ activity and were normalized to activity measured from cultures of wt only. The results show that cocultures of wt harboring phas-phoZ and a csrRS mutant at a 10:1 ratio (wt:mutant) have enhanced transcription of hasA (figure 6). When the reporter strain is a DhasA mutant, the transcriptional enhancement is enhanced further. Conversely, the effect is completely eliminated when either reporter strain is cocultivated with UMAA2526, a DcsrRS, DhasAB mutant. However, enhancement does not require the presence of an intact capsule, since the transcriptional enhancement is unaffected by the addition of hyaluronidase 0.1 mg/mL to the coculture. The specificity of hasA induction is confirmed by the failure of any of these conditions to enhance expression from the rofA promoter [20]. To determine whether encapsulated strains produce a soluble substance that induces wt expression of hasA, we next collected and tested supernates from cultures of various strains. Supernates were obtained from cultures sampled at early log phase (OD600 p 0.4), midlog phase (OD600 p 0.8), and early station- JID 2001;183 (1 April) ary phase (OD600 p 1.2) and were filtered through a 0.45-mm Millipore membrane. Aliquots from a log-phase culture (OD600 p 0.4) of reporter strain UMAA2497 (DhasAB) carrying the phas-phoZ were centrifuged, and the pellets were resuspended in the filtered supernates at 377C for 1–2 h. Culture supernates then were assayed for alkaline phosphatase and were normalized to values obtained by incubating supernates from the DhasAB mutant (UMAA2497) with the reporter strain. The results show that midlog-phase supernates from mucoid strain UMAA2392 (DcsrRS2) induced nearly a tripling of alkaline phosphatase production (figure 7). The inducer was not present at the earlier time point and dissipated dramatically in stationary-phase cultures. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that capsule expression generates the inducer, since the most abundant inducing activity coincides with the period of abundant capsule synthesis in UMAA2392. In this experiment, the addition of hyaluronidase reduced the peak induction of hasA transcription (figure 7). As expected, supernates from the DcsrRS, DhasAB mutant possessed no inducing activity at any time point (figure 7). Discussion For positively regulated virulence genes, mutation of the regulator or regulatory system results in the loss of function and pathogens with reduced capacity to cause infection or disease. The CsrRS system of group A streptococcus is unusual in that all the known virulence factors that it controls are regulated negatively [14, 15]. Consequently, mutation of the genes encoding this system result in enhanced expression of capsule and certain toxins and in increased virulence in a mouse skin infection model. This report demonstrates that such mutations occur in vivo. This phenomenon raises several interesting questions about the role of spontaneous mutants and the regulatory system itself. Spontaneous mutants were usually apparent by inspection of colonies growing on agar medium. We obtained confirmation that these strains have mutations in the csrRS locus by plasmid complementation analysis. Although this method provides 2– 4 copies of the csrRS locus in trans, we found no evidence that the increased copy number results in oversuppression of the CsrR-regulated genes. Sequencing of the csrRS locus of complemented strains invariably showed DNA alterations in the suspected gene. We observed that most spontaneous mucoid variants that arise during mouse infections have mutations in the csrR gene. Similarly, spontaneous LC variants were associated with mutations in csrS. For both variant phenotypes, the introduction of an intact csrRS locus of a plasmid returned the bacteria to their original wt colonial appearance, and curing of the plasmid restored the variant mucoid or LC phenotype, respectively. Although the plasmid used for these complementation experiments provides 2–4 copies of the csrRS locus in trans, we found JID 2001;183 (1 April) Spontaneous CsrR/CsrS Mutants of S. pyogenes 1051 Figure 5. Skin infection of mice with MGAS166 (white squares and bars), SBmuc7, a csrR mutant (dark gray squares and bars), or mixtures of the 2 strains (light gray squares and bars). Inocula for each data point on checkerboard are indicated by intersection of X-axis (2-fold dilutions of SBmuc7; 13, 105 cfu) and Y-axis (2-fold dilutions of MGAS166; 13, 106 cfu). Bars in upper portion of graph indicate mean total lesion areas in mm2 (erythema plus induration or abscess plus necrosis, Y-axis) at 24 and 48 h. Below the 3-dimensional bar graph, a similar checkerboard plot shows the no. of mice in each group of 5 that developed dermonecrotic lesions. no evidence that the increased copy number results in more suppression of CsrR-regulated genes than occurs in the wt strain with a single chromosomal copy of csrRS. Both the mucoid and LC variants also produce enhanced mouse virulence, as measured by lesion size and progression to necrosis. We suspect that the LC variants are identical to those described by Raeder et al. [21] and that csrS null mutation is the usual mechanism by which these variants arise. Both the variants described by this group and our LC mutants have decreased expression of SpeB [16]. The spontaneous csrR mutations described in this report consist mostly of single amino acid substitutions in or near critical domains required for the repressor function of this protein. In contrast, mutations in csrS occurred more frequently and were more often frameshift or nonsense mutations. Initially, mutations in a string of thymidines in csrS led us to speculate that a mechanism of phase variation of this gene might result from slipped-strand mispairing during replication, as described for Bordetella pertussis by Stibitz et al. [22]. Subsequently, we encountered frameshift mutations in numerous other locations within the gene and concluded that this T-rich segment is not the site of most mutations. Nevertheless, one might predict that reversion to wt csrS may occur at high frequency in a subset of our spontaneous mutants. Examination of LC variant mutants also showed insertions of IS1548 into the csrS reading frame. This IS element was found in all group A streptococci examined. Insertion of a mobile element is of particular interest as a modifier of virulence, since this element also inserts into the hyaluronidase gene of group B streptococcus and abrogates its function [23]. A review of 4 insertion sites of IS1548 in other locations on the group A streptococcal chromosome suggests that the sequence TGTCTA is found close by. This sequence is present once in the csrR open-reading frame and 3 times in csrS. One copy of this sequence is adjacent to the csrS insertion that we sequenced. The presence of this possible IS element “hot spot” suggests that csrS may have evolved to generate ablative mutations at a high frequency. A hypermutable csrRS locus might be adaptive if the loss of CsrRS regulation actually offers the organism some survival advantage. The experiment depicted in figure 4 shows that a CsrRS2 mutant coinoculated with the wt strain dramatically enhances growth of the wt bacteria in vivo. The simplest explanation for this observation is that the mutant creates a microenvironment that is permissive for growth of the coinoculated wt strain. This is consistent with the observation that the known CsrRS-regulated virulence factors are extracellular. Since the wt bacteria do not have the burden of synthesizing large amounts of capsule 1052 Engleberg et al. JID 2001;183 (1 April) well-established example of this phenomenon is the emergence of mucoid Pseudomonas aeruginosa among patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). As in streptococci, pseudomonal mucoidy arises by mutations affecting regulators. In the case of P. aeruginosa, these regulators are S factors that control alginate synthesis. One of these regulators, j54, serves as a negative regulator, and spontaneous mutations in the rpoN gene, which encodes j54, leads to mucoidy [24]. In addition, the mucoid isolates from CF patients arise in naturally hypermutable strains. This mutator phenotype was not found in P. aeruginosa isolated from patients without CF [25]. It is not known whether our wt strain, MGAS166, possesses a hypermutable phenotype or whether such a phenotype would predict more virulent streptococcal infection. In our mouse experiments, we observed enhanced virulence even when the spontaneous mutants accounted for a relatively small proportion of the total infecting bacterial population. We therefore wanted to determine what mixtures of mutant and Figure 6. Transcription of hasA in wild-type (wt) bacteria during coculture with encapsulated strains. MGAS166 (wt) and hasAB deletion mutant were used as reporter strains after electroporation with phas-phoZ or prof-phoZ. Reporter strains were cocultured with various other strains in 10:1 ratio, as indicated under diagram: MGAS166, a DcsrRS mutant (with or without addition of hyaluronidase 1 mg/mL), and DcsrRS, DhasAB mutant. After 1–2 h of coculture at 377C, supernates were assayed for alkaline phosphatase, and activities were normalized to MGAS166 coculture. A 1:10 proportion of encapsulated DcsrRS strain induced hasA transcription in wt strain and to higher levels in unencapsulated DhasAB reporter strain. In contrast, a nonencapsulated DcsrRS, DhasAB mutant failed to induce hasA above baseline. Reporter strain carrying a rofA-phoZ fusion was not induced by any of these coculture conditions. and toxins, they may actually outgrow the mutant strains in vivo. Similarly, the emergence of spontaneous mutants in vivo in experimentally infected mice was associated with more severe outcomes of infection, including larger lesion size and necrosis (table 4). It was therefore of interest to determine whether such strains emerge in human disease as well. We analyzed a small panel of human clinical isolates derived from patients with invasive streptococcal disease by complementation with a plasmid carrying the csrRS locus; several had significant phenotypic changes associated with the presence of the plasmid. A striking example is isolate UMAA2716 (shown in figure 3). DNA sequencing of this isolate identified a substitution in csrR that most likely accounts for the loss of function and the hypermucoid appearance of this strain. We speculate that the emergence of such mutants in humans may also affect the outcome of infection. The notion that a pathogen may mutate to a more virulent state in vivo is novel but not unprecendented. One striking and Figure 7. Enhanced transcription of hasA in MGAS166 carrying a DhasAB mutation by addition of supernates from cultures of encapsulated bacteria. Filtered supernates were obtained from streptococcal strains grown to various densities (as indicated) in liquid culture and were added to a midlog-phase culture of reporter strain UMAA2497 (DhasAB) with phas-phoZ for 1–2 h. Supernates were derived from cultures of DcsrRS2 (M), DcsrRS2 plus hyaluronidase 1 mg/mL (m), and DcsrRS, DhasAB (V). After incubation with reporter strain, supernates were assayed for alkaline phosphatase activity and were normalized to results obtained with supernate from DhasAB strain UMAA2497 (m). hasA transcription was increased by incubation with filtered supernate from late log-phase culture of encapsulated (DcsrRS) strain but not an unencapsulated (DcsrRS, DhasAB) strain. Addition of hyaluronidase reduced peak induction by encapsulated filtrate by ∼50%. JID 2001;183 (1 April) Spontaneous CsrR/CsrS Mutants of S. pyogenes wt bacteria would produce enhanced virulence. Figure 5 shows that wt infections containing a subpopulation of CsrRS2 bacteria cause more aggressive disease than did the wt strain inoculated alone at comparable levels. Although less dramatic, there is also a suggestion that the mutant strain may be more aggressive when a wt population is present in the lesion. For example, a mixture of 106 cfu of the wt strain (“13” in figure 5) and 105 cfu of the CsrRS mutant (also labeled “13”) produces larger lesions with more necrosis than does “23” of either strain inoculated alone. This pathogenic synergy suggests that each of the bacterial strains in the mixture may profit from the presence of the other in the lesion. The mechanisms responsible for this enhancement are not known, but we generated preliminary evidence that some signaling may occur between the mutant and wt bacteria. Specifically, we found that encapsulated strains produce a nonfilterable substance that induces transcription of hasA in wt bacteria. The modification of the response by addition of hyaluronidase and the absence of the effect when the DcsrRS, DhasAB mutant is mixed with reporter strains suggest that the inducer may be an oligomer of hyaluronic acid or some other soluble degradation product derived from the capsule. We conclude that group A streptococci possess a positive amplification system for capsule production and that a small proportion of heavily encapsulated bacteria may stimulate a neighboring population to produce capsule as well. This may partly explain the enhanced survival and growth of wt bacteria in mixed infections with CsrRS mutants and the observed pathogenic synergy in mouse skin infections. Of note, we demonstrated synergy with csrRS mutants, even though csrR and csrS mutations may have arisen spontaneously from the wt bacteria in the inocula. This potential problem did not obscure the demonstration of synergy with a csrR mutant; however, it confounded our attempt to demonstrate synergy with a csrS mutant. Since csrS mutants are less aggressively virulent than csrR mutants, the experiment may not have been sufficiently robust to detect any differences. In future experiments, it will be necessary to generate wt strains for comparison that cannot easily undergo csrRS mutation (e.g., a csrRS merodiploid strain). Nevertheless, it is possible that csrS mutants do not synergize with wt bacteria, since they do not produce the excess capsule that is characteristic of csrR mutants and therefore should not signal the wt strain to produce capsule. Reliable induction of mouse skin infections with the wt strain requires large inocula unless Cytodex beads are mixed with the bacteria [19]. In our synergy experiments, Cytodex was not used, and we observed that increasing inocula did not always result in larger lesions. Because of the relative insensitivity of mice to wt infection, the range between the minimal infectious dose and the dose that produces the maximal measured response (e.g., a plateau in lesion size) may be narrow. Some very large inocula produced measurably smaller lesions. The reason for this paradoxical 1053 finding is not obvious, but we speculate that bacteria injected at very high density may grow more slowly and spread less rapidly in tissue [26]. In addition, we observed that very large, severe lesions sometimes are measurably smaller on subsequent measurements, possibly as a result of dehydration. Both factors may limit the usefulness of lesion size as an indicator of virulence at the severe end of the disease spectrum. The large inocula required to generate lesions in the mouse model may not be typical of the number of organisms that initiate naturally occurring human disease. Since some of our experiments yielded identical mutants from individual mice, we can deduce that csrRS mutants already were present in the culture from which the initial inocula were prepared. In humans, we do not know whether csrRS mutants are acquired as such or emerge spontaneously in vivo. In the first case, we would expect de novo infections with csrRS mutants to be relatively more virulent. Assuming that all evolutionary changes are adaptive, it is likely that complete derepression of the CsrRS regulon must also have some counteradaptive features; otherwise, this control mechanism would not exist or all streptococci would be csrRS mutants. Counteradaptive features of the variants might include poor transmissibility or adherence, or perhaps the enhanced virulence of these variants per se is ultimately counterselective and is unlikely to be maintained as a consistent feature of group A streptococci. The second case, that csrRS mutations emerge in vivo, presents several interesting possibilities. For example, a spontaneous mucoid mutant in a superficial colonizing population may be more likely to survive after invasion of mucosal barriers than is the less consistently encapsulated strain from which it is derived. Alternatively, a csrRS mutant arising from a population that has already occupied a sterile body site might synergize with its parental strain to produce more aggressive disease. In this latter situation, infections that develop from smaller inocula of CsrRS1 bacteria would be less likely to give rise to csrRS mutants. The rare mutational event occurring early in the course of infection would lead to the largest proportion of variant bacteria and the most severe clinical manifestations. One might speculate that the severity of a streptococcal infection may be stochastically determined by the timing of the emergence of the variant population. The notion that variant populations influence the outcome of human streptococcal infection is unproven, but it is consistent with our data. Our findings demonstrate that human infections may be associated with CsrR2 or CsrS2 strains, but we do not know whether these strains were acquired with these mutations or whether they arose in vivo. Nor do we know what proportion of the infecting population they represent, since only single isolates were obtained from each patient. If disease outcome is influenced by >1 virulence-enhancing subpopulations coexisting with the primary infecting strain, then characterization of a single isolate from an infected person may not pro- 1054 Engleberg et al. vide an accurate picture of the pathogenic process in that person or the potential virulence of the infecting strain. Acknowledgments We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Michael Caparon (Washington University, St. Louis), Neil Barg (Internal Medicine Association of Yakima, Yakima, Washington), Don Low (University of Toronto, Toronto), June R. Scott (Emory University, Atlanta), and Kevin McIver (University of Texas–Southwestern, Dallas) for providing helpful advice or bacterial strains. References 1. Bisno AL, Stevens DL. Streptococcal infections of skin and soft tissues. N Engl J Med 1996; 334:240–5. 2. Stevens DL. Invasive group A streptococcus infections. Clin Infect Dis 1992; 14:2–11. 3. Davies HD, McGeer A, Schwartz B, et al. Invasive group A streptococcal infections in Ontario, Canada. Ontario Group A Streptococcal Study Group. N Engl J Med 1996; 335:547–54. 4. Zurawski CA, Bardsley M, Beall M, et al. Invasive group A streptococcal disease in metropolitan Atlanta: a population-based assessment. Clin Infect Dis 1998; 27:150–7. 5. Musser JM, Kapur V, Szeto J, Pan X, Swanson DS, Martin DR. Genetic diversity and relationships among Streptococcus pyogenes strains expressing serotype M1 protein: recent intercontinental spread of a subclone causing episodes of invasive disease. Infect Immun 1995; 63:994–1003. 6. Cleary PP, Kaplan EL, Handley JP, et al. Clonal basis for resurgence of serious Streptococcus pyogenes disease in the 1980s. Lancet 1992; 339:518–21. 7. Chaussee MS, Liu J, Stevens DL, Ferretti JJ. Genetic and phenotypic diversity among isolates of Streptococcus pyogenes from invasive infections. J Infect Dis 1996; 173:901–8. 8. Hsueh PR, Wu JJ, Tsai PJ, Liu JW, Chuang YC, Luh KT. Invasive group A streptococcal disease in Taiwan is not associated with the presence of streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin genes. Clin Infect Dis 1998; 26:584–9. 9. Johnson DR, Stevens DL, Kaplan EL. Epidemiologic analysis of group A streptococcal serotypes associated with severe systemic infections, rheumatic fever, or uncomplicated pharyngitis. J Infect Dis 1992; 166:374–82. 10. Nakashima K, Ichiyama S, Iinuma Y, et al. A clinical and bacteriologic investigation of invasive streptococcal infections in Japan on the basis of serotypes, toxin production, and genomic DNA fingerprints. Clin Infect Dis 1997; 25:260–6. 11. Kaul R, McGeer A, Low DE, Green K, Schwartz B, Simon AE. Populationbased surveillance for group A streptococcal necrotizing fasciitis: clinical features, prognostic indicators, and microbiologic analysis of seventyseven cases. Am J Med 1997; 103:18–24. JID 2001;183 (1 April) 12. Levin JC, Wessels MR. Identification of csrR/csrS, a genetic locus that regulates hyaluronic acid capsule synthesis in group A streptococcus. Mol Microbiol 1998; 30:209–19. 13. Bernish B, Van de Rijn I. Characterization of a two-component system in Streptococcus pyogenes which is involved in regulation of hyaluronic acid production. J Biol Chem 1999; 274:4786–93. 14. Federle M, McIver K, Scott J. A response regulator that represses transcription of several virulence operons in the group A streptococcus. J Bacteriol 1999; 181:3649–57. 15. Heath A, DiRita VJ, Barg NL, Engleberg NC. A two-component regulatory system, CsrR/CsrS, represses expression of three Streptococcus pyogenes virulence factors, hyaluronic acid capsule, streptolysin S, and pyrogenic exotoxin B. Infect Immun 1999; 67:5298–305. 16. Heath A, DiRita VJ, Engleberg NC. Characterization of Streptococcus pyogenes csrS: regulation of mucoidy and virulence [abstract O105]. In: Program and abstracts of the 14th Lancefield International Symposium for Streptococci and Streptococcal Diseases (Auckland). Porirua, New Zealand: Securacopy Book, 2000. 17. Granok AB, Parsonage D, Ross RP, Caparon MG. The RofA binding site in Streptococcus pyogenes is utilized in multiple transcriptional pathways. J Bacteriol 2000; 182:1529–40. 18. Husmann LK, Scott JR, Lindahl G, Stenberg L. Expression of the Arp protein, a member of the M protein family, is not sufficient to inhibit phagocytosis of Streptococcus pyogenes. Infect Immun 1995; 63:345–8. 19. Bunce C, Wheeler L, Reed G, Musser J, Barg N. A murine model of cutaneous infection with gram positive cocci. Infect Immun 1992; 60:2636–40. 20. Fogg GC, Gibson CM, Caparon MG. The identification of rofA, a positiveacting regulatory component of prtF expression: use of an m-gamma delta–based shuttle mutagenesis strategy in Streptococcus pyogenes. Mol Microbiol 1994; 11:671–84. 21. Raeder R, Harokopakis E, Hollingshead S, Boyle MD. Absence of SpeB production in virulent large capsular forms of group A streptococcal strain 64. Infect Immun 2000; 68:744–51. 22. Stibitz S, Aaronson W, Monack D, Falkow S. Phase variation in Bordetella pertussis by frameshift mutation in a gene for a novel two-component system. Nature 1989; 338:266–9. 23. Granlund M, Oberg L, Sellin M, Norgren M. Identification of a novel insertion element, IS1548, in group B streptococci, predominantly in strains causing endocarditis. J Infect Dis 1998; 177:967–76. 24. Boucher JC, Schurr MJ, Deretic V. Dual regulation of mucoidy in Pseudomonas aeruginosa and sigma factor antagonism. Mol Microbiol 2000; 36: 341–51. 25. Oliver A, Canton R, Campo P, Baquero F, Blasquez J. High frequency of hypermutable Pseudomonas aeruginosa in cystic fibrosis lung infection. Science 2000; 288:1251–3. 26. Stevens DL, Gibbons AE, Bergstrom R, Winn V. The Eagle effect revisited: efficacy of clindamycin, erythromycin, and penicillin in the treatment of streptococcal myositis. J Infect Dis 1988; 158:23–8.