Emerging Infectious Diseases (Aug 2018)

Novel Enterobacter Lineage as Leading Cause of Nosocomial Outbreak Involving Carbapenemase-Producing Strains

  • Racha Beyrouthy,
  • Marion Barets,
  • Elodie Marion,
  • Cédric Dananché,
  • Olivier Dauwalder,
  • Frédéric Robin,
  • Lauraine Gauthier,
  • Agnès Jousset,
  • Laurent Dortet,
  • François Guérin,
  • Thomas Bénet,
  • Pierre Cassier,
  • Philippe Vanhems,
  • Richard Bonnet

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2408.180151
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 8
pp. 1505 – 1515

Abstract

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We investigated unusual carbapenemase-producing Enterobacter cloacae complex isolates (n = 8) in the novel sequence type (ST) 873, which caused nosocomial infections in 2 hospitals in France. Whole-genome sequence typing showed the 1-year persistence of the epidemic strain, which harbored a blaVIM-4 ST1-IncHI2 plasmid, in 1 health institution and 2 closely related strains harboring blaCTX-M-15 in the other. These isolates formed a new subgroup in the E. hormaechei metacluster, according to their hsp60 sequences and phylogenomic analysis. The average nucleotide identities, specific biochemical properties, and pangenomic and functional investigations of isolates suggested isolates of a novel species that had acquired genes associated with adhesion and mobility. The emergence of this novel Enterobacter phylogenetic lineage within hospitals should be closely monitored because of its ability to persist and spread.

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