A Virulent Nonencapsulated Haemophilus influenzae

Abstract
Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae strain INTl was isolated from the blood of a young child with clinical signs of meningitis following acute otitis media. No immunologicor anatomic predisposition of this child for invasive bacterial infection with an unusual organism was documented. Sensitive ELISA proved the absence of intra- or extracellular capsular polysaccharide production by INTl, and Southern blot analysis confirmed the lack of an intact capsulation (cap) gene locus within the chromosome. Nevertheless, INTl established bacteremia and meningitis in infant and weanling rat models of invasive H. influenzae infection. High-molecular-weight DNA isolated from INT1 was shown to confer an invasive phenotype on transformation of a nonencapsulated, avirulent laboratory strain of H. influenzae. Together these findings imply the presence of one or more asyet-undiscovered, noncapsular virulence factors of H. influenzae that are capable of mediating invasive disease and resistance to immunologic clearance.

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