Microorganisms (May 2023)

Emergence of Azithromycin-Resistant <i>Neisseria gonorrhoeae</i> Isolates Belonging to the NG-MAST Genogroup 12302 in Russia

  • Ilya Kandinov,
  • Ekaterina Dementieva,
  • Marina Filippova,
  • Alexandra Vinokurova,
  • Sofya Gorshkova,
  • Alexey Kubanov,
  • Victoria Solomka,
  • Julia Shagabieva,
  • Dmitry Deryabin,
  • Boris Shaskolskiy,
  • Dmitry Gryadunov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11051226
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. 1226

Abstract

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The goal of this work was to determine the factors affecting the emergence of azithromycin-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolates in Russia, where azithromycin was never recommended for the treatment of gonococcal infections. Clinical N. gonorrhoeae isolates collected in 2018–2021 (428 isolates) were analyzed. No azithromycin-resistant isolates were found in 2018–2019, but in 2020–2021, a significant increase in the ratio of azithromycin-resistant isolates was observed: 16.8% and 9.3%, respectively. A hydrogel DNA microarray was developed for the analysis of resistance determinants: mutations in the genes encoding the mtrCDE efflux system and in all four copies of the 23S rRNA gene (position 2611). A majority of the azithromycin-resistant Russian isolates belonged to the NG-MAST G12302 genogroup, and the resistance was associated with the presence of a mosaic structure of the mtrR gene promoter region with the −35 delA deletion, an Ala86Thr mutation in the mtrR gene, and a mosaic structure of the mtrD gene. A comparative phylogenetic study of modern Russian and European N. gonorrhoeae populations allowed us to conclude that the emergence of azithromycin resistance in Russia in 2020 was the result of the appearance and spread of European N. gonorrhoeae strains belonging to the G12302 genogroup due to possible cross-border transfer.

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