Genome-Wide Identification of Essential Genes in the Invasive Streptococcus anginosus Strain
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Background
Streptococcus anginosus , part of the Streptococcus anginosus group (SAG), is a human commensal increasingly recognized as an opportunistic pathogen responsible for abscesses formation and infections, also invasive ones. Despite its growing clinical importance, the genetic determinants of its pathogenicity remain poorly understood.
Objectives
This study aimed to identify essential genes in S. anginosus 980/01, a bloodstream isolate, under optimal laboratory conditions using a transposon mutagenesis combined with Transposon-Directed Insertion Site Sequencing (TraDIS).
Methods
A mutant library was generated using the IS S1 transposon delivered via the thermosensitive plasmid pGh9:IS S1 . Following transposition, insertions were mapped using Illumina sequencing and analyzed. Essential genes were identified based on the absence of insertions and statistical filtering.
Results
The library exhibited 98% genome saturation with over 130,000 unique insertion sites. Among 1,825 genes, 348 (19.1%) were essential, 1,446 non-essential, and 30 non-conclusive. Comparative analyses were performed with S. pyogenes MGAS5005 and S. agalactiae A909. Similarly to the latter, essential genes were enriched in functions related to translation, transcription, and cell wall biosynthesis. However, 40 genes uniquely essential to S. anginosus 980/01 were identified, suggesting unique survival strategies in S. anginosus .
Conclusions
This study presents the first genome-wide identification of essential genes for S. anginosus 980/01, highlighting conserved and unique essential genes. These findings provide a basis for understanding its pathogenic potential and for identifying novel antimicrobial targets.