Journal of Infection and Public Health (Jan 2021)

Molecular characterization of multidrug resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae clinical isolates recovered from King Abdulaziz Specialist Hospital at Taif City, Saudi Arabia

  • Rihab Lagha,
  • Fethi Ben Abdallah,
  • Asmaa A.H. ALKhammash,
  • Nabil Amor,
  • Mohamed M. Hassan,
  • Imed Mabrouk,
  • Majid Alhomrani,
  • Ahmed Gaber

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 143 – 151

Abstract

Read online

Klebsiella pneumoniae is an opportunistic pathogen responsible for a significant proportion of nosocomial and community-acquired infections. Genotypic variation in K. pneumoniae populations is a major barrier to control public health risk associated with pathogen. In this work, thirty K. pneumoniae were recovered from hospital and were tested for their resistance to antibiotics. Genetic variability of the isolates was performed using PCR based on genes coding for porins and efflux pumps, (GTG)5 and BOX repetitive sequences. K. pneumoniae showed heterogenicity of resistance to antibiotics based on gender or specimen type. Further, out of 30 isolates, 25 different profiles were found and 83.33% are multidrug-resistant. PCR detection of genes coding for porins and efflux pumps revealed seven different genotypes and strong correlation between antibiotics resistance profiles and investigated genes. PCR genomic fingerprinting showed high genetic diversity of K. pneumoniae. BOX-PCR and (GTG)5 generated 18 and 19 clusters with discriminatory indexes 0.97 and 0.98, respectively at 80% of similarity. K. pneumoniae clinical isolates showed high phenotypic and genetic variability, and many strains can be circulating simultaneously. This genetic variability should be taken into consideration when designing strategies for controlling K. pneumoniae outbreaks. In addition, a significant correlation, was detected for the first time, between (GTG)5-genotyping and antibiotic resistance patterns of K. pneumoniae and could be valuable in the prediction of antibiotic resistance profiles of K. pneumoniae.

Keywords