Streptococcal Superantigen, Mitogenic Factor, and Pyrogenic Exotoxin B Expressed by Streptococcus pyogenes Structure and Function

JM Musser - Preparative biochemistry & biotechnology, 1997 - Taylor & Francis
JM Musser
Preparative biochemistry & biotechnology, 1997Taylor & Francis
Streptococcus pyogenes is a Gram-positive human bacterial pathogen that causes
pharyngitis, tonsillitis, skin infections (impetigo, erysipelis, and other forms of pyoderma),
acute rheumatic fever (ARF), scarlet fever (SF), poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis
(PSGN), a streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (STSS), and necrotizing fasciitis. These
infections are some of the most economically and medically important conditions that affect
humans. For example, globally, ARF is the most common cause of pediatric heart disease. It …
Abstract
Streptococcus pyogenes is a Gram-positive human bacterial pathogen that causes pharyngitis, tonsillitis, skin infections (impetigo, erysipelis, and other forms of pyoderma), acute rheumatic fever (ARF), scarlet fever (SF), poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis (PSGN), a streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (STSS), and necrotizing fasciitis. These infections are some of the most economically and medically important conditions that affect humans. For example, globally, ARF is the most common cause of pediatric heart disease. It is estimated that in India more than six million school-aged children suffer from rheumatic heart disease (1). In the United States, “sore throat” is the third most common reason for physician office visits and S. pyogenes is recovered from about 30% of children with this complaint (2). It has been estimated that there are 25–35 million cases of streptococcal pharyngitis per year in the United States, and these infections cause 1–2 billion dollars per year in direct health care costs (3,4). Although the continued great morbidity and mortality caused by S. pyogenes in developing nations, the significant health care financial burden attributable to group A streptococci in the United States, and increasing levels of antibiotic resistance (5), have highlighted the need for a fuller understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of streptococcal infection, it has been the relatively recent intercontinental increase in streptococcal disease frequency and severity (6,7) that has resulted in renewed interest in S. pyogenes virulence factors and host-parasite interactions.
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