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Transposon Mutants of Staphylococcus epidermidis Deficient in Elaboration of Capsular Polysaccharide/Adhesin and Slime Are Avirulent in a Rabbit Model of Endocarditis

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References

1994

Year

Abstract

Virulence comparisons were made in a rabbit model of endocarditis between wild-type and transposon mutants of Staphylococcus epidermidis deficient in elaboration of the capsular polysaccharide/adhesin (PS/A) and slime. The parental phenotype grew from 36 (61%) of 59 cultures of blood. The PS/A-negative phenotype grew in 1 (1%) of 98 cultures of blood (P < .001). No animals infected with PS/A-negative strains developed endocarditis compared with 75% of rabbits infected with PS/A-positive strains. PS/A-producing strains survived better than did PS/A-deficient strains in intact, absorbed rabbit or human serum plus human leukocytes. There was also greater deposition of C3 onto the PS/A-deficient strains than with the PS/A-producing isogenic strains. PS/A functions as an antiphagocytic bacterial capsule preventing C3 deposition and phagocytosis; loss of this structure increases the strain's susceptibility to opsonic killing and decreases its virulence.