Characterization of competition between commensal A2 and clinical A1 strains of Enterococcus faecium
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/33531Date
2023-05-14Type
MastergradsoppgaveMaster thesis
Author
Fenzel, Carolin KorneliaAbstract
Enterococcus faecium (E. faecium) emerged from a gut commensal to one of the leading
nosocomial multidrug-resistant pathogens. The species of E. faecium, has a deep phylogenetic
split into commensal and clinical strains. The dominance of clinical strains during nosocomial
infections is only insufficiently understood. Previous studies revealed competitive
characteristics between the commensal and clinical clade.
This thesis aimed to study interaction and competition dynamics in vitro between a diverse
range of different strains of commensal and clinical E. faecium clades. For the commensals, the
focus was set on clade A2. Competitive growth on agar plates was carried out to determine
inhibition grades between competing strains. Furthermore, the degree of inhibition mediated by
bacterial supernatant combined with different stress treatments was investigated. Previous
studies suggested proteinaceous and heat-stable secreted compounds, such as bacteriocins,
which might be involved in mediating inhibition. On genome level, bacteriocins were predicted
using the bacteriocin prediction database BAGEL4.
It was shown that diverse clinical clade A1 and commensal clade A2 E. faecium strains
generally could outcompete each other in some cases. Clinical strains showed a higher
inhibition frequency and most of them could be associated with hospital-leading lineages. Some
commensal strains showed high inhibition and at the same time resistance of being inhibited
towards a whole range of clinical strains. Most of these inhibitions could be associated with
secreted proteinaceous, heat-stable compounds, most likely bacteriocins. However, a lot of
bacteriocins or other secreted compounds which might mediate E. faecium inhibition remain
unknown and further studies are needed.
Publisher
UiT Norges arktiske universitetUiT The Arctic University of Norway
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