“…As an opportunistic pathogen, GBS (or Streptococcus agalactiae ) asymptomatically resides in the gastrointestinal and/or female genital tract of 25-30% of healthy adults (Wilkinson, 1978, Regan et al ., 1991) but can cause severe infections in some individuals, such as pregnant people and newborns, the elderly, and patients living with cancer or diabetes (Nandyal, 2008, Pimentel et al ., 2016, Russell et al ., 2017, Patras & Nizet, 2018, van Kassel et al ., 2019, Navarro-Torne et al ., 2021). Within the female genital tract, GBS coexists and/or competes with the vaginal microbiota and, therefore, has evolved mechanisms to survive these encounters while also avoiding immune clearance (Okumura & Nizet, 2014, Vrbanac et al ., 2018, Coleman et al ., 2021).…”