PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

Impact of mutations in the mtrR, rpdlVD and rrl genes on azithromycin resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae.

  • Florian Mauffrey,
  • Fabrice Poncet,
  • Damien Jacot,
  • Gilbert Greub,
  • Patrice Nordmann,
  • Dominique S Blanc

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0306695
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 7
p. e0306695

Abstract

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IntroductionBacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs) pose a major public health problem. The emergence of antibiotic-resistant strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae represents a serious threat to successful treatment and epidemiological control. The first extensively drug-resistant (XDR) strains (ceftriaxone-resistant and high-level azithromycin-resistant [HLR AZY]) have been reported.AimsTo identify molecular mechanisms implicated in azithromycin resistance in strains isolated from patients over a three-year period in a university hospital in Switzerland.Material and methodsFrom January 2020 to December 2022, 34 isolates (one per patient) were recovered from samples analyzed at the University Hospital of Lausanne. Eight genes involved in azithromycin resistance were sequenced: mtrR repressor (mtrCDE operon repressor) and his promotor mtrR-pr, rplD gene (L4 ribosomal protein), rplV gene (L22 ribosomal protein) and the four alleles of the rrl gene (23S rRNA).ResultsWith a cutoff value of 1 mg/L, 15 isolates were considered as being resistant to azithromycin, whereas the remaining 19 were susceptible. The C2597T mutation in 3 or 4 of the rrl allele confer a medium-level resistance to azithromycin (MIC = 16 mg/L, N = 2). The following mutations were significantly associated with MIC values ≥1 mg/L: the three mutations V125A, A147G, R157Q in the rplD gene (N = 10) and a substitution A->C in the mtrR promotor (N = 9). Specific mutations in the mtrR repressor and its promotor were observed in both susceptible and resistant isolates.ConclusionsResistance to azithromycin was explained by the presence of mutations in many different copies of 23S RNA ribosomal genes and their regulatory genes. Other mutations, previously reported to be associated with azithromycin resistance, were documented in both susceptible and resistant isolates, suggesting they play little role, if any, in azithromycin resistance.