BMC Research Notes (Feb 2018)

Molecular detection of colistin resistance genes (mcr-1 to mcr-5) in human vaginal swabs

  • Jilei Zhang,
  • Li Chen,
  • Jiawei Wang,
  • Patrick Butaye,
  • Ke Huang,
  • Haixiang Qiu,
  • Xiaomei Zhang,
  • Weijuan Gong,
  • Chengming Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-018-3255-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 4

Abstract

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Abstract Objective Colistin resistance has emerged worldwide and has been threatening the efficacy of one of the last-resort antimicrobials used for treatment of multidrug resistant Gram-negative bacteria. While five colistin resistance genes (mcr-1, mcr-2, mcr-3, mcr-4 and mcr-5) have been described, few data are available on the prevalence of mcr-genes other than mcr-1 in human samples. Results In this study, the presence of five currently described colistin resistance genes (mcr 1–5) in vaginal swabs of women undergoing infertility evaluation was reported. Most samples were found to be positive for the mcr-4 (12.7%), followed by two for the mcr-2 (1.5%), two for the mcr-3 (1.5%), one for the mcr-1 (0.7%), and one for the mcr-5 (0.7%). Phylogenetic comparison demonstrated identical (mcr-1, mcr-2, mcr-3, mcr-5) or similar (mcr-4) nucleotide sequences of human samples and those of animal origins from the same city, suggesting the potential transmission of mcr genes from animals to humans. This is the first detection of mcr-2, mcr-4 and mcr-5 genes in human samples, and warrants further research to determine the spread of the mcr genes and elucidate the full epidemiology of colistin resistance genes in humans.

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