Chemistry: molecular biology and microbiology – Measuring or testing process involving enzymes or... – Involving nucleic acid
Reexamination Certificate
2001-04-06
2004-07-20
Navarro, Mark (Department: 1645)
Chemistry: molecular biology and microbiology
Measuring or testing process involving enzymes or...
Involving nucleic acid
C435S007100, C435S007720, C435S007900, C435S069100, C435S252300, C435S320100, C530S350000, C530S300000, C536S023200, C536S023700, C536S023400, C424S200100
Reexamination Certificate
active
06764823
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND
The staphylococci, of which
Staphylococcus aureus
is the most important human pathogen, are hardy, gram-positive bacteria that colonize the skin of most humans. Staphylococcal strains that produce coagulase are designated
S. aureus
; other clinically important coagulase-negative staphylococci are
S. epidermidis
and
S. saprophyticus
. When the skin or mucous membrane barriers are disrupted, staphylococci can cause localized and superficial infections that are commonly harmless and self-limiting. However, when staphylococci invade the lymphatics and the blood, potentially serious complications may result, such as bacteremia, septic shock, and serious metastatic infections, including endocarditis, arthritis, osteomyelitis, pneumonia and abscesses in virtually any organ. Certain strains of
S. aureus
produce toxins that cause skin rashes, food poisoning, or multisystem dysfunction (as in toxic shock syndrome).
S. aureus
and
S. epidermidis
together have become the most common cause of nosocomial non-urinary tract infection in U.S. hospitals. They are the most frequently isolated pathogens in both primary and secondary bacteremias and in cutaneous and surgical wound infections. See generally
Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine,
13th ed., Isselbacher et al., eds., McGraw-Hill, New York (1994), particularly pages 611-617.
Transient colonization of the nose by
S. aureus
is seen in 70 to 90 percent of people, of which 20 to 30 percent carry the bacteria for relatively prolonged periods of time. Independent colonization of the perineal area occurs in 5 to 20 percent of people. Higher carriage rates of
S. aureus
have been documented in persons with atopic dermatitis, hospital employees, hospitalized patients, patients whose care requires frequent puncture of the skin, and intravenous drug abusers.
Infection by staphylococci usually results from a combination of bacterial virulence factors and a diminution in host defenses. Important microbial factors include the ability of the staphylococcus to survive under harsh conditions, its cell wall constituents, the production of enzymes and toxins that promote tissue invasion, its capacity to persist intracellularly in certain phagocytes, and its potential to acquire resistance to antimicrobial agents. Important host factors include an intact mucocutaneous barrier, an adequate number of functional neutrophils, and removal of foreign bodies or dead tissue.
Cell wall components of
S. aureus
include a large peptidoglycan complex that confers rigidity on the organism and enables it to survive under unfavorable osmotic conditions, a unique teichoic acid linked to peptidoglycan, and protein A, which is found both attached to peptidoglycan over the outermost parts of the cell and released in soluble form. Proteins designated femA and femB are involved in the formation of cell wall peptidoglycan pentaglycine cross-bridges and are factors in methicillin resistance (Berger-Bachi et al,
Mol. Gen. Genet.,
219, 263-269 (1989)).
S. aureus
also has specific receptors for laminin and fibronectin that may mediate the organism's spread through the bloodstream to other tissues. Both peptidoglycan and teichoic acid are capable of activating the complement cascade via the alternative pathway.
S. aureus
also appears to activate tissue factor in the coagulation pathway.
Certain enzymes produced by
S. aureus
may play a role in virulence. Catalase degrades hydrogen peroxide and may protect the organism during phagocytosis. Coagulase is present in both soluble and cell-bound forms and causes plasma to clot by formation of thrombin-like material. The high correlation between coagulase production and virulence suggests that this substance is important in the pathogenesis of staphylococcal infections, but its precise role as a determinant of pathogenicity has not been determined. Many strains also produce hyaluronidase, an enzyme that degrades hyaluronic acid in the connective tissue matrix and that may promote spreading of infection. A trypsin-like protease from some strains enhances influenza virus infection by proteolytic cleavage of the viral precursor hemagglutinin into its active fragments and may contribute to the morbidity of such co-infections.
S. aureus
produces numerous extracellular exotoxins that have been implicated in disease processes. The exfoliatin toxins A and B, the staphylococcal enterotoxins, and the toxic shock syndrome toxin, TSST-1, belong to the growing family of microbial superantigens that activate T cells and monocytes/macrophages, resulting in the production of cytokines that mediate local or systemic effects depending on the amount of toxin formed, the immune status of the host, and the access of the toxin to the circulation. The exfoliatin toxins mediate the dermatologic manifestations of the staphylococcal scalded-skin syndrome and bullous impetigo. These toxins cause intraepidermal cleavage of the skin at the stratum granulosum, leading to bullae formation and denudation. Seven distinct enterotoxins (A, B, C1, C2, C3, D, and E) have been implicated in food poisoning due to
S. aureus
. These toxins enhance intestinal peristalsis and appear to induce vomiting by a direct effect on the central nervous system. Toxic shock syndrome (TSS) is most commonly mediated by TSST-1, which is present in 5 to 25 percent of clinical isolates of
S. aureus
. TSS is also mediated less frequently by enterotoxin B and, rarely, enterotoxin C1.
S. aureus
produces other toxins whose role in virulence is incompletely understood. Four different red blood cell hemolysins, which are designated alpha, beta, gamma, and delta toxins, have been identified. Alpha toxin also causes necrosis of the skin when injected subcutaneously into animals, while delta toxin also inhibits water absorption in the intestines and may play a role in the acute watery diarrhea seen in some cases of staphylococcal infection. Leukocidin lyses granulocyte and macrophage membranes by producing membrane pores permeable to cations.
The agr, xpr, sae and sar coding sequences have been identified as being involved in the regulation of staphylococcal exotoxins. See U.S. Pat. No. 5,587,228 and International Patent Publication Nos. WO 96/10579 and WO 97/11690. Of interest is the report in WO 97/11690 of screening for inhibitors of these regulatory systems.
Staphylococci can invade the skin or mucosa through plugged hair follicles and sebaceous glands or areas traumatized by burns, wounds, abrasions, insect bites, or dermatitis. Staphylococci often colonize prosthetic devices and intravenous catheters;
S. aureus
infection of the vascular access site is a major cause of morbidity and death among patients on hemodialysis. Colonization and invasion of the lungs may occur with endotracheal intubation, or when the lungs' clearance mechanisms are depressed, e.g., after viral infections, after aspiration, or in patients with cystic fibrosis. Mucosal damage to the gastrointestinal tract following cytotoxic chemotherapy or radiotherapy predisposes to invasion from that site.
Once the skin or mucosa have been breached, local bacterial multiplication is accompanied by inflammation, neutrophil accumulation, tissue necrosis, thrombosis and fibrin deposition at the site of infection. Later, fibroblasts create a relatively avascular wall about the area. When host mechanisms fail to contain the cutaneous or submucosal infection, staphylococci may enter the lymphatics and the bloodstream. Common sites of metastatic spread include the lungs, kidneys, cardiac valves, myocardium, liver, spleen, bones and brain.
Bacteremia due to
S. aureus
may arise from any local infection, at either extravascular (cutaneous infections, bums, cellulitis, osteomyelitis, arthritis) or intravascular foci (intravenous catheters, dialysis access sites, intravenous drug abuse). Commonly, the disease progresses more slowly, with hectic fever and metastatic abscess formation. Rarely, patients with bacteremia die within 12 to 24 hours with high fever, tachycardia, cyanosis, and vasc
Arvidson Staffan
Quinn Cheryl
Tomichi Che-Shen C.
Baskar Padmavathi
Mueting Raasch & Gebhardt, P.A.
Navarro Mark
Pharmacia & Upjohn Company
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