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PLoS One 2018 Jun 8;13(6):e0198526

Resistome of carbapenem- and colistin-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae clinical isolates.

Lomonaco S, Crawford MA, Lascols C, Timme RE, Anderson K, Hodge DR, Fisher DJ, Pillai SP, Morse SA, Khan E, Hughes MA, Allard MW, Sharma SK

Abstract

The emergence and dissemination of carbapenemases, bacterial enzymes able to inactivate most beta-lactam antibiotics, in Enterobacteriaceae is of increasing concern. The concurrent spread of resistance against colistin, an antibiotic of last resort, further compounds this challenge further. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) can play a significant role in the rapid and accurate detection/characterization of existing and emergent resistance determinants, an essential aspect of public health surveillance and response activities to combat the spread of antimicrobial resistant bacteria. In the current study, WGS data was used to characterize the genomic content of antimicrobial resistance genes, including those encoding carbapenemases, in 10 multidrug-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates from Pakistan. These clinical isolates represented five sequence types: ST11 (n = 3 isolates), ST14 (n = 3), ST15 (n = 1), ST101 (n = 2), and ST307 (n = 1). Resistance profiles against 25 clinically-relevant antimicrobials were determined by broth microdilution; resistant phenotypes were observed for at least 15 of the 25 antibiotics tested in all isolates except one. Specifically, 8/10 isolates were carbapenem-resistant and 7/10 isolates were colistin-resistant. The blaNDM-1 and blaOXA-48 carbapenemase genes were present in 7/10 and 5/10 isolates, respectively; including 2 isolates carrying both genes. No plasmid-mediated determinants for colistin resistance (e.g. mcr) were detected, but disruptions and mutations in chromosomal loci (i.e. mgrB and pmrB) previously reported to confer colistin resistance were observed. A blaOXA-48-carrying IncL/M-type plasmid was found in all blaOXA-48-positive isolates. The application of WGS to molecular epidemiology and surveillance studies, as exemplified here, will provide both a more complete understanding of the global distribution of MDR isolates and a robust surveillance tool useful for detecting emerging threats to public health.


Category: Journal Article
PubMed ID: #29883490 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0198526
PubMed Central ID: #PMC5993281
Includes FDA Authors from Scientific Area(s): Food Women's Health
Entry Created: 2018-06-10 Entry Last Modified: 2018-08-05
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