Streptococcus suis 2 transcriptional regulator tsts stimulates cytokine production and bacteremia to promote streptococcal toxic shock-like syndrome

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Abstract

Two large-scale outbreaks of streptococcal toxic shock-like syndrome (STSLS) have revealed Streptococcus suis 2 to be a severe and evolving human pathogen. We investigated the mechanism by which S. suis 2 causes STSLS. The transcript abundance of the transcriptional regulator gene tstS was found to be upregulated during experimental infection. Compared with the wild-type 05ZY strain, a tstS deletion mutant (ΔtstS) elicited reduced cytokine secretion in macrophages. In a murine infection model, tstS deletion resulted in decreased virulence and bacterial load, and affected cytokine production. Moreover, TstS expression in the P1/7 strain of S. suis led to the induction of STSLS in the infected mice. This is noteworthy because, although it is virulent, the P1/7 strain does not normally induce STSLS. Through a microarray-based comparative transcriptomics analysis, we found that TstS regulates multiple metabolism-related genes and several virulence-related genes associated with immune evasion.

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Xu, Z., Chen, B., Zhang, Q., Liu, L., Zhang, A., Yang, Y., … Jin, M. (2018). Streptococcus suis 2 transcriptional regulator tsts stimulates cytokine production and bacteremia to promote streptococcal toxic shock-like syndrome. Frontiers in Microbiology, 9(JUN). https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2018.01309

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