Panton-Valentine leucocidin is the key determinant of Staphylococcus aureus pyomyositis in a bacterial genome-wide association study

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Abstract

Pyomyositis is a severe bacterial infection of skeletal muscle, commonly affecting children in tropical regions and predominantly caused by Staphylococcus aureus . To understand the contribution of bacterial genomic factors to pyomyositis, we conducted a genome-wide association study of S. aureus cultured from 101 children with pyomyositis and 417 children with asymptomatic nasal carriage attending the Angkor Hospital for Children in Cambodia. We found a strong relationship between bacterial genetic variation and pyomyositis, with estimated heritability 63.8% (95% CI 49.2-78.4%). The presence of the Panton-Valentine leucocidin (PVL) locus increased the odds of pyomyositis 130-fold ( p =10 -17.9 ). The signal of association mapped both to the PVL-coding sequence and the sequence immediately upstream. Together these regions explained > 99.9% of heritability. Our results establish staphylococcal pyomyositis, like tetanus and diphtheria, as critically dependent on expression of a single toxin and demonstrate the potential for association studies to identify specific bacterial genes promoting severe human disease.

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last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00