Figure 7.
Figure 7. Detection of TSST-1 and SEB in supernatants from clinical S aureus isolates and expression of B1Rs and B2Rs in a patient suffering from an S aureus soft-tissue infection. (A-B) Supernatants from the clinical isolates 9730, 1878, 2374, 1024, and 15159 (lane 2 to 6) were separated on SDS-PAGE, transferred onto nitrocellulose membranes, and immunostained with antibodies against TSST-1 (A) or SEB (B). The strain ATCC 700699, whose genome has been completely sequenced, was used as a control (lane 1). Note that the apparent molecular weights of toxins vary between the tested strains. Size variation is a common feature of bacterial proteins from different strains that is often caused by homologous recombination between repeated regions within the gene39 and has normally no influence on the activity of the protein. (C) Tissue biopsies from the epicenter of the infection site and from a distal site were obtained from a patient with a soft-tissue infection caused by S aureus. The biopsies were cryosectioned and immunohistochemically stained for IL-1β, B1R, and B2R. Omission of the primary antibody was included as a negative control and was always completely negative. Stainings were quantified by in situ imaging and the results are presented as the imaging value: area and intensity of the positive stain (brown) in relation to the total cell area (blue), as previously described.26

Detection of TSST-1 and SEB in supernatants from clinical S aureus isolates and expression of B1Rs and B2Rs in a patient suffering from an S aureus soft-tissue infection. (A-B) Supernatants from the clinical isolates 9730, 1878, 2374, 1024, and 15159 (lane 2 to 6) were separated on SDS-PAGE, transferred onto nitrocellulose membranes, and immunostained with antibodies against TSST-1 (A) or SEB (B). The strain ATCC 700699, whose genome has been completely sequenced, was used as a control (lane 1). Note that the apparent molecular weights of toxins vary between the tested strains. Size variation is a common feature of bacterial proteins from different strains that is often caused by homologous recombination between repeated regions within the gene39  and has normally no influence on the activity of the protein. (C) Tissue biopsies from the epicenter of the infection site and from a distal site were obtained from a patient with a soft-tissue infection caused by S aureus. The biopsies were cryosectioned and immunohistochemically stained for IL-1β, B1R, and B2R. Omission of the primary antibody was included as a negative control and was always completely negative. Stainings were quantified by in situ imaging and the results are presented as the imaging value: area and intensity of the positive stain (brown) in relation to the total cell area (blue), as previously described.26 

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