Publication | Open Access
Association of Intrastrain Phase Variation in Quantity of Capsular Polysaccharide and Teichoic Acid with the Virulence of<i>Streptococcus pneumoniae</i>
361
Citations
28
References
1998
Year
Pathogenic MicrobiologyMicrobial PathogensBacteriologyIntrastrain Phase VariationCapsular PolysaccharideBacterial PathogensMedical MicrobiologySpontaneous Phase VariationInfection ControlBiochemistryVirulence FactorOpaque PhenotypeClinical MicrobiologyIncorporated CholineMicrobial DiseasePathogenesisMicrobiologyTeichoic AcidMedicine
The pneumococcus undergoes spontaneous phase variation between an opaque and a transparent colony form. In an animal model of systemic infection following intraperitoneal inoculation of mice, the opaque phenotype was significantly more virulent than the transparent for each of 3 strains examined. The opaque phenotype was associated with 1.2- to 5.6-fold greater amounts of capsular polysaccharide compared with the transparent using a sandwich ELISA. A similar technique comparing the amount of total teichoic acid showed that the transparent phenotype had 2.1- to 3.8-fold more immunodetectable teichoic acid. This difference was confirmed by comparing the incorporation of [3H]choline into teichoic acid. Cell fractionation revealed that variation in quantity of incorporated choline was due to differences in cell wall-associated teichoic acid. Results suggest that the pneumococcus phase varies between a virulent form with more capsular polysaccharide and less teichoic acid and an avirulent form with less capsular polysaccharide and more teichoic acid.
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