Deakin University
Browse

File(s) not publicly available

Analysis of phylogenetic diversity and in vitro adherence characteristics of respiratory syncytial virus and Streptococcus pneumoniae clinical isolates obtained during pediatric respiratory co-infections

journal contribution
posted on 2020-01-01, 00:00 authored by J C Brealey, Peter Sly, P R Young, K J Chappell
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and

Streptococcus pneumoniae

are frequently co-associated during acute respiratory infections, particularly amongst infants and young children. In this study, we aimed to identify strains of RSV and serotypes/sequence types of

S. pneumoniae

associated with co-infections within a cohort of paediatric patients, and to assess RSV-mediated adhesion of pneumococcal isolates. The RSV glycoprotein sequence was determined for 58 RSV-positive samples and molecular serotyping and MLST was used to analyse 26 pneumococcal isolates. We also compared 23 pneumococcal isolates for their adherence to RSV-infected or mock-infected airway epithelia cells using immunofluorescence microscopy and automated particle counting. The tight association between RSV and

S. pneumoniae

was also visualized using scanning electron microscopy. This study did not identify any statistically significant trend in the strains of RSV and

S. pneumoniae

associated with co-infections. Furthermore, almost all isolates (22 of 23) showed significantly increased adherence to RSV-infected cells. The level of adherence did not appear to correlate with pneumococcal strain or sequence type, and isolates obtained from RSV-infected patients displayed a similar level of adherence as those from RSV-negative patients. The absence of particular

S. pneumoniae

or RSV strains associated with co-infection, together with the near ubiquitous presence of RSV-mediated adhesion throughout the pneumococcal clinical isolates, may indicate that the mechanisms governing the association with RSV are of sufficient importance to be maintained across much of the species.

History

Journal

Microbiology

Volume

166

Issue

1

Pagination

63 - 72

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Location

London, England

ISSN

1350-0872

eISSN

1465-2080

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal