Entero- and exfoliative toxin gene profiling of 237 methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) isolated
from Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia Medical Centre (UKMMC) were carried out via PCR amplification. Among
the tested toxin genes, sei was found to be the most prevalent (54.9%).
Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) has been used to characterise methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) isolates into sequence types (STs) and together with SCCmec typing, form the clonal nomenclature for MRSA. MLST was conducted as per the standard protocol on ten out of 236 isolates collected previously from January to December 2009 representing four different SCCmec types. Relationship analysis was performed with eBURST via the MLST website. Four unlinked ‘singleton’ STs were detected: ST30, ST239, ST772 and ST1178. Together with SCCmec typing, five MRSA clones were identified: ST30-IV, ST239-II, ST239-III, ST772-V and ST1178-IV. Clones ST239-III and ST30-IV are already established in Malaysian hospitals and in the local community, respectively. ST772-V is an emerging clone reported previously to have a propensity to displace pre-existing predominant clones. A clone involving the predominant ST in Malaysia (ST239) with SCCmec type II is the first of its kind to be identified. MRSA clones in our centre are very diverse and clone surveillance with large sample sizes should be undertaken as collaborative efforts between local institutions to maximise detection coverage.