Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) of SmaI macrorestriction fragments of chromosomal DNA was used to confirm the persistence of methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus isolates in the sputum of 25 cystic fibrosis patients in five French hospitals. Three-to-eight consecutive isolates, with the same esterase electrophoretic type isolated from each patient over a period of 12-28 months, were analysed. Consecutive isolates with indistinguishable PFGE profiles were found in 12 patients (48%) and consecutive isolates with similar PFGE profiles showing minor differences of one-to-four fragments (similarity coefficient 284%) were found in 11 patients. Consecutive isolates with different PFGE profiles were obtained from only two patients, but the profiles found in each patient were more closely related to each other than to other profiles. The results were in agreement with esterase electrophoretic typing for 23 patients, and we considered that those patients were infected with a single persistent strain. For any given patient, variations in antibiotypes and phage types of consecutive isolates were not associated with major genotypic variations. PFGE is useful in confirming the persistence of S. aureus strains in cystic fibrosis patients over long periods.
Cluster analysis of the SmaI patterns, generated by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, of 44 methicillinresistant (MRSA) and 118 methicillin-sensitive (MSSA) Staphylococcus aureus strains isolated in various French hospitals and 61 MRSA and 48 MSSA strains from 20 other countries revealed 20 genomic groups distributed into four distantly related phylogenic branches. Eighty-three of the 105 MRSA strains (79%) were clustered in the six genomic groups of phylogenic branch I; and 154 of the 166 MSSA strains (92.8%) were clustered in the 14 genomic groups of phylogenic branches II, III, and IV. Agreement between genomic group and two other markers, esterase type and phage group, was obtained, emphasizing the clonal structure of the population. The genomic groups were delineated by esterase type. The distribution of the strains within the genomic groups was independent of their geographical origin; French strains were clustered with strains from other countries. The three types of the staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (SCCmec) complex were distributed according to genomic groups. Most of the time, type I and type II SCCmec complexes were found in the MRSA strains belonging to the same genomic groups. In contrast, the type III SCCmec complex was specific to the MRSA strains belonging to the three genomic groups characterized by a common esterase type.
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