Title: The Streptococci
1The Streptococci
- With Emphasis on Streptococcus and Enterococcus
2Preliminary Grouping of Gram Positive Cocci
Note SBA hemolysis as alt to PYR?
Catalase
_
chains
_
Staphylococcus
Micrococcus
Rothia
PYR
Other Strep Group genera
_
See Staph PP
A Disk
S
R
Streptococcus sp other Group genera
S.pyogenes GAS A disc contains bacitracin
Enterococcus
3Strep Group GeneraNOT on the test
- Streptococcus
- Enterococcus
- Aerococcus
- Leuconostoc
- Abiotrophia
- Pediococcus
- Lactococcus
- Granulicatella
- Other new genera
4Metabolism
- Streptococci divide to form pairs and chains.
Chain length varies among species depends upon
growth conditions - broth generally favors chain
formation - The streptococci are catalase-negative
Gram-positive cocci - Streptococci conduct fermentation exclusively
therefore grow fairly slowly. As strict
fermentors, their O2 requirement is described as
aerotolerant anaerobes. Some grow better in the
absence of oxygen, but virtually all streps will
grow anywhere in regard to O2 - Streptococcal colonies are usually 1 mm or less
after 24h incubation under optimum conditions,
although this varies from species to species.
5Classification
- Genetic analysis indicated a lack of relatedness
between some organisms previously in the Genus.
The original genus Streptococcus has now been
split into more than a dozen genera. - Most notable of these were a few bile-resistant
strep-like bacteria that inhabit the intestine of
humans and many warm blooded animals,
Streptococcus faecalis and Streptococcus faecium.
- The Genus Enterococcus was created for these
entericStreps, hence E. faecalis and E. faecium - Fortunately for clinical microbiologists and
physicians, the majority of the newly named
genera contain few bacteria that are clinically
significant - The original genus Streptococcus and the genus
Enterococcus comprise most of the human clinical
isolates
6Classification
- Below are some newly named genera that were split
from the genus Streptococcus - Lactococcus
- Aerococcus
- Leuconostoc not important for test
- Pediococcus
- Gamella
- To reiterate, these are rarely of clinical
significance but are occasionally misidentified
as Streptococcus or Enterococcus
7Classification - hemolysis
- In 1903 J.H. Brown grouped streps by their
ability to lyse RBCs - Beta hemolysis(? ) complete lysis of RBCs
- Alpha hemolysis (? ) K removal from RBCs
resulting in an opaque greenish-brown zone around
colonies - Gamma hemolysis ( ?) no effect on RBCs
- Alpha prime hemolysis (?') small zone of intact
RBCs adjacent to the colony surrounded by a zone
of complete hemolysis??? - Using the term gamma hemolysis is synonymous
for having no effect - clinical microbiologists
also call these organisms non-hemolytic
streptococci
8Classification - Sherman
- Sherman in the early 1900s placed the streps in
physiologic groups via physiological
differences. His pyogenic group (to form pus)
contained most of the pathogenic penicillin
sensitive beta hemolytic species, usually
isolated from pus. - Another physiologic group was the bile tolerant
penicillin resistant gut bacteria, removed from
the genus Streptococcus and later becoming the
genus Enterococcus - It was he who reclassified Diplococcus pneumoniae
(later officially changed to Streptococcus
pneumoniae in the early 1970s) as the
pneumococcus only 1 species. This organism
was ? hemolytic originally penn sensitive - It is (or at least was) by far the most common
cause of community and hospital acquired
bacterial pneumonia in humans. It is definitely
the 1 cause of acute typical bacterial pneumonia.
9Classification - Sherman
- Another of Shermans groups included the alpha
hemolytic bile and penicillin sensitive
streptococci which are normal microbiota of the
oral cavity several species are included here
including S. mutans and S. sobrinus - He named them the viridans group because of
their tendency to produce alpha hemolysis.
Viridian is latin for a green tint.
10Classification - Lancefield
- In 1927 Rebecca Lancefield discovered the ability
to group streptococci based upon differences in
streptococcal cell wall polysaccharides, and the
production of serum antibody in rabbits
innoculated with these streptococcal antigens. - Conducting precipitin tests in capillary tubes,
Lancefield combined known serum antibodies with
extracted streptococcal antigen, and identified
which antigen(s) each species possessed. - In this way, Lancefield originated the
Lancefield groups of Streptococcus that we
still use to this day. For example - S. pyogenes in Group A ? hemolytic
- S. agalactiae in Group B ? hemolytic
- S. zooepidemicus in Group C ? hemolytic
- S. faecalis in Group D variable
11Lancefield Capillary Precipitation
Rabbit Anti- serum
Ag-Ab interface
Ag-Ab interface
Rabbit Anti- serum
Strep Antigen Extract
No Precipitate (Negative Test)
Antibody against a strep group antigen
Precipitate (Positive Test)
Strep Antigen Extract
12Classification - Lancefield
- Lancefield realized that all species in each
group generally (and conveniently) shared
clinically significant properties such as type of
hemolysis, normal host, body system or tissue
where indigenous, etc. For example - Group A - S. pyogenes human upper respiratory
- Group B - S. agalactiate human urogenital
- Group C - S. zooepidemicus from animal products
- Group D - S. faecalis bile-resistant, fecal
origin - Lancefield identified many other antigens, and
proposed several Lancefield groups. Groups A, B,
C, D, F, and G were the primary groups likely
from human infections - Lancefield later determined that viridans streps
pneumococci did NOT possess antigens that
reacted with her antisera - More recently, a new species, S. milleri was
found to carry A,C, F G antigens, and display
all 3 types of hemolysis.
13Preliminary Grouping NOT on test
Broth ch tet - - - - - -
Beta hemolysis /- - b -
- - - -
NaCl - /- /- /- -
45oC /- - - - -
Va S S b S S R R S
PYR -a -b - -
LAP - - /-
Streptococcus Enterococcus Lactococcus Aerococcus
Leuconostoc Pediococcus Gamella
Brothgrowth in broth chchains tettetrads
Vavancomycin PYR pyrrolidonyl arylamidase
LAPleucine aminopeptidase NaClgrowth in 6.5
sodium chloride Growth at 45oC a Streptococcus
pyogenes is PYR positive b Occasional exception
14Cultural Characteristics
- Streptococcus species tend to be more fastidious
than staphylococci and Enterococcus - SBA is ideal for growing Streptococcus as it
contains various amino acids, vitamins
minerals. Any Additional catabolizable carbs
present in SBA can mask the normal appearance of
? hemolysis making it appear ? - Sheeps blood has 3 advantages over other animal
blood - 1. Haemophilus species will not grow on SBA due
to the presence of NADase which neutralizes
extracellular NAD (V factor). - Hemolytic Haemophilus colonies on blood from
other animals is easily confused with beta
hemolytic Streptococcus species - 2. Sheeps blood gives a distinctly clear beta
hemolysis that is obviously different from alpha
hemolysis not necessarily true of reactions on
other animal bloods - 3. Human blood can contain growth inhibiting
antibodies, etc that prevent recovery of
organisms from samples
15Cultural Characteristics
- Growth of Streptococci can be enhanced by
incubation in a CO2 rich environment (5-8).
Some strains, particularly some S. pneumoniae,
will not grow at all without added CO2 - Some streptococci grow better anaerobically than
under any other conditions, but remember that
streps are aerotollerant - As said earlier, streptococci are fermentors and
therfore form small colonies (some species form
pin-point colonies) - Most species form colonies that are translucent,
convex, shiny - S. pneumoniae colonies vary. Some have slightly
raised edges to form a low convex colony, others
have a bump in the center (umbonate) and others
have a smooth dip in the center (a concave or
umbilicate colony) - S. pneumoniae may have large capsules making
their colonies mucoid these rarely form
umbilicate colonies
16Cultural Characteristics
- Enterococcus species and Streptococcus agalactiae
(group B streptococci or GBS) tend to grow larger
colonies (and therefore more opaque) than other
Streptococcus species - Colonies of Enterococcus and GBS range form
1mm-1.5mm in diameter in 18-24h
17Identification
- Streptococcal ID is important due to the
potential severity of the condition, but streps
are fortunately fairly easy to ID to a point - Presumptive ID can be performed with a few
conventional tests. Isolation from any normally
sterile body fluid or cavity necessitates
definitive ID, usually by technical means such as
serotyping, NA homology, etc. - The Streptococcus milleri group, the new
strep, carries A, C, F, and G antigens (47 of
isolates type out as group F) or it may possess
no Lancefield antigen at all. Also, isolates can
be either beta, alpha, or nonhemolytic - The name S. milleri has been challenged by
researchers at the CDC who had call it
Streptococcus anginosus - Whatever name is finally assigned to it, this
bacterium is definitely pathogenic and should be
identified completely whenever isolated from
normally sterile sites. SO, how to do it
18Identification S. milleri
- Isolated from purulent deep tissue abscesses
- Pinpoint colony which is often beta hemolytic but
could be non-hemolytic or alpha hemolytic - Distinct caramel / butterscotch odor - variable
- Lancefield variable or non-groupable (47 F)
- Bacitracin resistant (vs S. pyogenes)
- Sulphonamide resistance (vs most other streps)
- Optochin resistance (vs alpha hemolytic streps)
- Tom VP positive
19Identification - NVS
- Another distinctive group of streptococci are
Nutritionally Variant Strep (NVS) sometimes
isolated from blood - This group cannot synthesize certain growth
factors (e.g. vitamin B6 and cysteine) which must
be added to the culture medium. Common SBA does
not contain these growth factors - Detection of NVS can be accomplished by streaking
SBA and then making a band streak of a Staph
aureus culture across the plate (this is known as
the Staph streak) - NVS will grow as tiny colonies adjacent to the
staph streak S. aureus synthesizes and secretes
the required growth factors - Commercial supplemented blood agar media (such as
Danish blood agar) contains the required growth
factors for NVS - Gram positive, catalase negative cocci that do
not grow on sheeps blood or chocolate agar
should be suspected and tested using the Staph
streak test
20Staph Streak For NVS
Specimen streaked For isolated colonies
Staph aureus culture Band streak
NVS colonies Satelliting the Staph streak
21Identification - catalase
- The catalase test generally differentiates the
two major groups of Gram-positive cocci (staph
and strep), but it might not be straight forward
as some streps produce pseudocatalatase,
especially when grown on SBA. This is
demonstrated as slight bubbling in the presence
of hydrogen peroxide after a brief delay. - Care must also be taken when growth is collected
from SBA because blood itself contains catalase.
All in all, it is better to grow cultures on
non-blood media for catalase testing - Cultures grown on SBA that show the
characteristic pseuodocatalase reaction, should
be sub-cultured on non-blood media, usually an
agar slant. Drop H2O2 directly on the growth on
the slant and monitor for bubbling. This is
referred to as the tube catalase test. - In a truly positive catalase test such as staph,
there is an immediate appearance of very obvious
bubbling
22Presumptive ID Tests - CAMP
- The CAMP test (acronym for developers) is used
to differentiate S. agalactiae (GBS), which is
positive, from other beta hemolytic strep, all of
which are negative - CAMP factor is a soluble hemolysin produced by
GBS that combines in a synergistic way with a
similar hemolysin of S. aureus to form an
arrowhead zone of clearing. See image - The staph is streaked perpendicularly to the
unknown strep. After appropriate incubation time
an arrowhead-shaped clear zone of hemolysis
will appear
23(No Transcript)
24Presumptive Identifying Tests
- Several of the tests used to presumptively ID
strep are sensitivity tests for certain
antibiotics (bacitracin, novobiocin,
sulfomethoxizole, optochin, etc.). - The bile-esculin test (several formats) which
determines if organisms can hydrolyze esculin (to
glucose) in the presence of bile, and the NaCl
tolerance test, both indicate Enterococci which
are . - The PYR (pyrrolidonyl peptidase) test is a rapid
disk test performed on colonies growing on a agar
media. Beta hemolytic GAS and Enterococcus are
25Presumptive ID NOT on test
Hemo- lysis ? ? a b ? ?,?,? ?,? ? , ? ?
Baci- tracin S R b R b NA NA
NA NA
Bile Esculin - - -
- b -
Opto- chin NA NA NA R R
R S
Organism GAS GBS Groups C,F,G Entero- coccus Gro
up D Strep Viridans Pneumo- cocci
SXT R R S NA NA NA NA
CAMP - - - - - -
PYR - - - - -
NaCl - - b - - - -
NANot applicable a Weak beta b occasional
exception
26Antigen Testing
- Lancefield grouping can be used to ID strep as
already discussed - The original capillary precipitation test is
tedious and time consuming, but recently
developed methods utilize inert particles coated
with group specific antibodies - Antigens extracted from unknown streptococci are
mixed with the antibody coated particles and
observed for agglutination - Unlike Lancefields difficult extraction
technique of boiling 24h broth cultures in an
acid solvent, recently developed extraction
methods use enzymes or acid and take only
minutes. - GAS (from throat swabs) and GBS (colonies grown
from vaginal or rectal swabs) antigens are
sometimes detectable directly in clinical
specimens or from enrichment broth cultures - This GAS test is called the rapid strep test.
27Clinical Significance
- S. pyogenes (GAS) causes several diseases some of
which have been previously discussed - Streptococcal pharyngitis ( otitis media
sinusitis) - Scarlet fever
- Rheumatic fever
- Necrotizing fasciitis
- Streptococcal toxic shock syndrome
- Meningitis
- Glomerulonephritis
- Impetigo
- Cellulitis
- and more
28Clinical Significance
- S. agalactiae (GBS)
- Neonatal meningitis / septicemia
- Cystitis and pyelonephritis
- Postpartum endometritis
- Postpartum septicemia
- Suture site infections in women following
caesarian section
29Clinical Significance
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Community acquired typical bacterial pneumonia
- Meningitis (any age group but predominates in
adults over 60) - Sinusitis and otitis media
- Bacteremia and septicemia (usually associated
with meningitis and pneumonia)
30Clinical Significance
- Enterococcus sp.
- Upper and lower urinary tract infections (mainly
nosocomial nursing homes) - Native valve and prosthetic valve endocarditis
- Intra-abdominal and pelvic infections
- Wound infections
- Septicemia and meningitis in neonates and rarely
other age groups
31Clinical Significance
- Beta hemolytic groups C, F and G
- Recent reports suggest these organims may be
emerging pathogens connected to various
pathologies - ?Acute pharyngitis
- ?Acute otitis media
- ? Endocarditis
- ? Meningitis
- ? Toxic shock syndrome
- ? Rheumatic fever
- ? Catheter-related septicemia
32Clinical Significance
- Viridans streptococci
- A leading cause (1 strep) of bacterial native
valve and prosthetic valve endocarditis not
pre-empted by streptococcal pharyngitis - Dental caries capsule allows the bacterium
(mainly S. mutans S. sobrinus) to adhere firmly
to the teeth. Adherent bacteria produce acid
fermentation products that dissolve the enamel of
the teeth
33Clinical Significance - other
- Streptococcus milleri (S. anginosus) is
associated with deep tissue and intra-abdominal
abscesses - The nutritionally variant streptococci (NVS) are
associated with bacterial endocarditis
34Antimicrobial Susceptibility
- The antibiotic of choice for treating most
streptococcal infections has always been
penicillin G. - GAS and GBS are uniformly susceptible to it,
although GAS penicillin resistance is present and
growing - Until recently virtually all S. pneumoniae were
also susceptible to penicillin G. A small
percentage has developed complete pen resistance
and others are intermediately resistant
(requiring a high dose of penicillin G to effect
a cure) - Enterococcus sp. are often moderately or
completely resistant to penicillin G and other
beta lactam antibiotics (Keflex, etc) - Until recently the drug of choice was ampicillin
in enterococcal UTIs non-urinary infections -
this resistance is increasing
35Antimicrobial Susceptibility
- Vancomycin is now the drug of choice for
beta-lactam resistant Enterococcus species - Very recently however, even vancomycin resistance
Enterococcus (VRE) have been detected in hospital
outbreaks including Centra Health facilities - Surveillance for VRE is conducted in all
accredited medical facilities. - A higher percentage of E. faecium isolates are
VR than are E. faecalis isolates (E. faecium is
the 1 most VR bacterium), however E. faecalis is
a much more common human clinical isolate, so
there is no agreement as to which is worse. - Presently there does not seem to be a good
antimicrobial alternative available for treating
serious infections caused by VRE
36Virulence Factors - GAS
- Capsule anti-phagocytosis specific attachment
to specific tissues - M protein in cell wall anti-phagocytosis
specific attachment to specific tissues - Streptolysin O and S leukocidins vs neutrophils
macrophages - Streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxins (SPE)
superantigens directly stimulate T-cells
(1000X more than a normal immune response) and
cause them release high levels of the cytokines
that are responsible for fever and shock - SPE is also responsible for various tissue
destruction, including skin lesions, and perhaps
scarlet fever - Hyaluronidase dissolves the hyaluronic acid that
holds cellular basement membranes together
(Hyaluronidase is therefore a spreading factor)
37Virulence Factors
- S. pneumoniae
- Capsule anti-phagocytosis specific attachment
to specific tissues - Pneumolysin anti-phagocytosis it also
interferes with the action of tracheal cilia
results in a croup-like cough - Other GBS
- Capsule anti-phagocytosis specific attachment
to specific tissues - Enterococcus (some strains)
- Intrinsic resistance to beta lactam antibiotics
due to the production of beta lactamases