Staphylococcal toxins: screening of burn wound isolates and evidence for alphahaemolysin production in the burn wound |
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Authors: | R. C. Fader Pamela J. Hals F. C. W. Koo |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Microbiology, The University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, USA b The Shriners Burns Institute, Galveston, USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() Culture filtrates of Staphylococcus aureus strains isolated from burn patients were examined for cytotoxic activities. A large molecular weight cytotoxin (MW=253000 daltons) that exhibited cytotoxicity for human foreskin cells and haemolytic activity against human and rabbit erythrocytes was identified. The cytotoxic activity could be completely neutralized by antiserum formed against the cytotoxin. Further characterization of the molecule by isoelectric focusing revealed that the cytotoxin was composed of at least two toxic factors of smaller molecular weight. Both factors exhibited cytotoxicity to tissue-culture cells. however, one factor lysed rabbit but not human erythrocytes whereas the other factor had the opposite haemolytic pattern. The cytotoxicity of each factor was neutralized by the antiserum formed against the cytotoxin. A cytotoxic factor that exhibited haemolytic activity for rabbit erythrocytes, and that was neutralized by the cytotoxin antiserum, was identified in burn wound extracts of mice infected with Staph. aureus. On the basis of molecular weight and isoelectric focusing data, we conclude that the large molecular weight cytotoxin was composed of an aggregation of alpha-haemolysin and another presently unidentified toxic molecule, possibly delta-toxin. Alpha-haemolysin appears to be produced in vivo during experimental staphylococcal burn wound infection. |
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