
Growth Phase-Dependent Effect of Clindamycin on Production of Exoproteins by Streptococcus pyogenes
Author(s) -
Jun Sawai,
Tadao Hasegawa,
Takuya Kamimura,
Akira Okamoto,
Daisuke Ohmori,
Nobuyuki Nosaka,
Keiko Yamada,
Keizo Torii,
Michio Ohta
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.07
H-Index - 259
eISSN - 1070-6283
pISSN - 0066-4804
DOI - 10.1128/aac.00539-06
Subject(s) - streptococcus pyogenes , clindamycin , microbiology and biotechnology , penicillin , streptococcaceae , streptococcus , biology , antibiotics , bacteria , chemistry , staphylococcus aureus , genetics
The administration of high-dose clindamycin plus benzylpenicillin has been recommended for the treatment of streptococcal toxic shock-like syndrome caused byStreptococcus pyogenes , and clindamycin has been found to be more effective than beta-lactams in retrospective analyses of human cases. Although therapeutic doses of clindamycin have also been shown to be effective against experimental infections and clindamycin has great efficacy against the production of bacterial exoproteins, we recently reported that the level of production of some exoproteins was unchanged or even increased by a subinhibitory dose of clindamycin when it is added upon the initiation of bacterial culture and the treated cultures were analyzed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. In this study we further examined the effect of clindamycin on the production of exoproteins by adding it toStreptococcus pyogenes cultures during various growth phases. We found that the levels of production of some proteins, NAD+ glycohydrolase, streptolysin O, and streptococcal inhibitor of complement, were increased when clindamycin was added at early-log-phase growth, which was the result that was seen when clindamycin was added at the beginning of culture. However, clindamycin inhibited the production of most types of proteins when it was administered toStreptococcus pyogenes cultures at mid-log-phase growth. IncsrS - ormga -knockout bacterial strains, the increase in exoproteins seen in parental strains was considerably inhibited. Our study indicates that the in vitro effect of clindamycin on the production of exoproteins greatly depends on the growth phase of bacteria and some regulatory factors ofStreptococcus pyogenes that are involved in this phenomenon.