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Letter
Nature Medicine 13, 1510 - 1514 (2007)
Published online: 11 November 2007 | Corrected online: 27 November 2007 | doi:10.1038/nm1656
Identification of novel cytolytic peptides as key virulence determinants for community-associated MRSA
Rong Wang1, Kevin R Braughton1, Dorothee Kretschmer2, Thanh-Huy L Bach1, Shu Y Queck1, Min Li1, Adam D Kennedy1, David W Dorward3, Seymour J Klebanoff4, Andreas Peschel2, Frank R DeLeo1 & Michael Otto1
Abstract
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) remains a major human pathogen. Traditionally, MRSA infections occurred exclusively in hospitals and were limited to immunocompromised patients or individuals with predisposing risk factors. However, recently there has been an alarming epidemic caused by community-associated (CA)-MRSA strains, which can cause severe infections that can result in necrotizing fasciitis or even death in otherwise healthy adults outside of healthcare settings1, 2. In the US, CA-MRSA is now the cause of the majority of infections that result in trips to the emergency room3. It is unclear what makes CA-MRSA strains more successful in causing human disease compared with their hospital-associated counterparts. Here we describe a class of secreted staphylococcal peptides that have a remarkable ability to recruit, activate and subsequently lyse human neutrophils, thus eliminating the main cellular defense against S. aureus infection. These peptides are produced at high concentrations by standard CA-MRSA strains and contribute significantly to the strains' ability to cause disease in animal models of infection. Our study reveals a previously uncharacterized set of S. aureus virulence factors that account at least in part for the enhanced virulence of CA-MRSA.
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