Browsing by Author "Shittu, Adebayo"
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- ItemOpen AccessBacteriome interactions in pediatric atopic dermatitis in a rural and urban South African cohort(2023) Ndhlovu, Gillian Ophelya Nondumiso; Dube, Sizwe; Shittu, AdebayoSkin and nasal bacterial dysbiosis is common in children with atopic dermatitis (AD). However, there is limited data of these bacterial changes in sub-Saharan children with AD. Therefore, this study investigated the bacterial alterations in skin and nasal bacterial communities in AD compared to healthy children in rural and urban South African settings. Staphylococcus aureus was more common in children with AD (cases) than healthy children (controls). S. aureus carriage was also associated with increased disease severity. Using spa typing, we also showed that cases and controls were colonised by distinct spa types. This led us to comprehensively explore genomic differences of S. aureus in cases and controls using whole-genome sequencing. Here, we showed that S. aureus strains from cases and controls had distinct genomic features, with cases harbouring genes associated with antibiotic resistance, DNA damage repair and virulence while controls had genes associated with adhesion. Recent reports indicate the potential role of coagulase-negative Staphylococcus (CoNS) in AD pathology. This study found that CoNS and S. aureus were commonly co-carried on nonlesional skin among cases (regardless of location) and anterior nares among urban cases than the control group. The carriage of S. capitis on nonlesional skin and anterior nares was positively associated with more severe disease in both rural and urban cases. 16S rDNA amplicon sequencing analysis revealed that bacterial diversity was higher on the nonlesional skin and anterior nares of controls. Bacterial community structure differed on lesional skin, nonlesional skin and anterior nares based on AD disease status. The relative abundance of Streptococcus, Granulicatela, Veillonella and Prevotella was high in lesional skin specimens, Anoxybacillus and Cutibacterium on nonlesional skin, and Staphylococcus, Veillonella and Sphingomonas in the anterior nares among cases Overall, the findings presented in this thesis indicate that S. aureus and other CoNS, particularly S. capitis, may predominate among cases and are associated with increased disease severity. However, the increased relative abundance of genera such as Streptococcus, especially among skin samples, indicates that other bacterial genera may be contributing to disease activity on lesional skin in AD than the traditionally reported Staphylococcus.
- ItemOpen AccessCharacterization of methicillin-susceptible and -resistant staphylococci in the clinical setting: a multicentre study in Nigeria(BioMed Central Ltd, 2012) Shittu, Adebayo; Oyedara, Omotayo; Abegunrin, Fadekemi; Okon, Kenneth; Raji, Adeola; Taiwo, Samuel; Ogunsola, Folasade; Onyedibe, Kenneth; Elisha, GayBACKGROUND: The staphylococci are implicated in a variety of human infections; however, many clinical microbiology laboratories in Nigeria do not identify staphylococci (in particular coagulase negative staphylococci - CNS) to the species level. Moreover, data from multi-centre assessment on antibiotic resistance and epidemiology of the staphylococci are not available in Nigeria. This study investigated 91 non-duplicate staphylococcal isolates obtained from the microbiology laboratories of eight hospitals in Nigeria during the period January to April 2010. METHODS: Identification and antibiotic susceptibility testing was performed using the VITEK 2 system, detection of resistance genes by PCR, and molecular characterization was determined by SCCmec typing, spa and multilocus sequence typing (MLST). RESULTS: All the isolates were susceptible to mupirocin, tigecycline, vancomycin and linezolid, but 72.5% of CNS and 82.3% of Staphylococcus aureus were resistant to cotrimoxazole, while multiresistance was observed in 37 of the 40 CNS isolates. Untypeable SCCmec types (ccrC/Class A mec and ccr-negative/Class C2 mec gene complex) in two methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) were identified. Additionally, ccr-negative/Class A mec and ccr type 4/Class C2 mec gene complex was detected in one isolate each of S. sciuri and S. haemolyticus, respectively. The S. aureus isolates were classified into 21 spa types including two new types (t8987, t9008) among the methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (MSSA) isolates. Two (CC8-SCCmecnon-typeable and CC88-SCCmec IV) and four (CC8-SCCmec III/IV/V; CC30-SCCmec II/III; CC88-SCCmec IV; and ST152-SCCmecnon-typeable) MRSA clones were identified in Maiduguri (North-East Nigeria) and South-West Nigeria, respectively. The proportion of Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL)-positive MSSA was high (44.4%) and 56.3% of these strains were associated with sequence type (ST) 152. CONCLUSIONS: The identification of multiresistant mecA positive S. haemolyticus and S. sciuri from clinical samples indicates that characterization of CNS is important in providing information on their diversity and importance in Nigeria. There is the need to develop new SCCmec classification methods for non-typeable methicillin-resistant staphylococci, and to curtail the spread and establishment of the S. aureus ST152 clone in Nigeria. The study presents the first report of a PVL-positive ST152-SCCmecnontypeable MRSA and SCCmec typing of methicillin-resistant CNS in Nigeria.