Respiratory Tract Infections
Staphylococcus Vaccines
Nosocomial infections: Staphylococcus aureus
from Alice G. Cheng, Olaf Schneewind and Dominique Missiakas writing in Vaccine Design: Innovative Approaches and Novel Strategies
Staphylococcus aureus is the most frequent cause of human skin and soft tissue, bloodstream and respiratory tract infections. Staphylococcal strains have acquired antibiotic resistance traits against available therapies and drug-resistant strains (MRSA, methicillin-resistant S. aureus) are currently isolated in up to 80% of hospital and 60% of community-acquired infections (CA-MRSA). Unlike pneumococci and group A streptococci; S. aureus infections do not raise immunity against subsequent infections. Consistent with this observation, early efforts to develop vaccines from whole-cell killed preparations of staphylococci have failed. More recent work characterized proteins and carbohydrates in the staphylococcal envelope and examined these molecules as protective antigens in vaccine studies. A recent article reviews the pathogenesis of S. aureus infections as well as past and current efforts that have been pursued to develop effective vaccines.
Further reading: Vaccine Design: Innovative Approaches and Novel Strategies | Staphylococcus: Molecular Genetics
from Alice G. Cheng, Olaf Schneewind and Dominique Missiakas writing in Vaccine Design: Innovative Approaches and Novel Strategies
Staphylococcus aureus is the most frequent cause of human skin and soft tissue, bloodstream and respiratory tract infections. Staphylococcal strains have acquired antibiotic resistance traits against available therapies and drug-resistant strains (MRSA, methicillin-resistant S. aureus) are currently isolated in up to 80% of hospital and 60% of community-acquired infections (CA-MRSA). Unlike pneumococci and group A streptococci; S. aureus infections do not raise immunity against subsequent infections. Consistent with this observation, early efforts to develop vaccines from whole-cell killed preparations of staphylococci have failed. More recent work characterized proteins and carbohydrates in the staphylococcal envelope and examined these molecules as protective antigens in vaccine studies. A recent article reviews the pathogenesis of S. aureus infections as well as past and current efforts that have been pursued to develop effective vaccines.
Further reading: Vaccine Design: Innovative Approaches and Novel Strategies | Staphylococcus: Molecular Genetics