Short communication: Characterization of an atypical maltose-negative Staphylococcus aureus through the use of phenotypic and molecular techniques

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Abstract

The most clinically relevant staphylococci in veterinary medicine are those that are coagulase-positive, namely Staphylococcus aureus. During microbiological udder health monitoring (2009–2018), a new S. aureus strain (coagulase-positive and maltose-negative) was discovered as an emerging udder pathogen during routine examinations of South African dairy herds. This study challenged the conventional microbiological diagnosis of staphylococci by comparing its results to those of the MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry and 16S rRNA sequencing. Both of these tests confirmed that the maltose-negative staphylococcus (MNS), identified as Staphylococcus pseudintermedius by conventional microbiology, was S. aureus ST2992. Multi locus sequence typing was performed on 3 of the MNS isolates and indicated that these isolates were of single origin. These strains tested positive for both MALA and MALR genes (control: S. aureus ATCC 25923). Although the α-glucosidase gene was present, it was not expressed phenotypically. The latter may be attributed to the abnormal stop codon identified in the MALA gene sequence of S. aureus ST2992 (GenBank accession number, MN531305). The newly identified MNS has a field behavior different to that of maltose-positive S. aureus, and more similar to the low virulence of non-aureus staphylococci.

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Karzis, J., Petzer, I. M., Donkin, E. F., Naidoo, V., & Labuschagne, C. (2020). Short communication: Characterization of an atypical maltose-negative Staphylococcus aureus through the use of phenotypic and molecular techniques. Journal of Dairy Science, 103(8), 7407–7410. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2019-17901

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