PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Identification and characterization of two novel bla(KLUC) resistance genes through large-scale resistance plasmids sequencing.

  • Teng Xu,
  • Jun Ying,
  • Xiaoding Yao,
  • Yulong Song,
  • Ping Ma,
  • Bokan Bao,
  • Weiyan Jiang,
  • Xinmei Wu,
  • Huifen Tou,
  • Peizhen Li,
  • Ping Ren,
  • Jingxian Fei,
  • Lei Yang,
  • Qi Liu,
  • Zuyuan Xu,
  • Tieli Zhou,
  • Liyan Ni,
  • Qiyu Bao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0047197
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 10
p. e47197

Abstract

Read online

Plasmids are important antibiotic resistance determinant carriers that can disseminate various drug resistance genes among species or genera. By using a high throughput sequencing approach, two groups of plasmids of Escherichia coli (named E1 and E2, each consisting of 160 clinical E. coli strains isolated from different periods of time) were sequenced and analyzed. A total of 20 million reads were obtained and mapped onto the known resistance gene sequences. As a result, a total of 9 classes, including 36 types of antibiotic resistant genes, were identified. Among these genes, 25 and 27 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) appeared, of which 9 and 12 SNPs are nonsynonymous substitutions in the E1 and E2 samples. It is interesting to find that a novel genotype of bla(KLUC), whose close relatives, bla(KLUC-1) and bla(KLUC-2), have been previously reported as carried on the Kluyvera cryocrescens chromosome and Enterobacter cloacae plasmid, was identified. It shares 99% and 98% amino acid identities with Kluc-1 and Kluc-2, respectively. Further PCR screening of 608 Enterobacteriaceae family isolates yielded a second variant (named bla(KLUC-4)). It was interesting to find that Kluc-3 showed resistance to several cephalosporins including cefotaxime, whereas bla(KLUC-4) did not show any resistance to the antibiotics tested. This may be due to a positively charged residue, Arg, replaced by a neutral residue, Leu, at position 167, which is located within an omega-loop. This work represents large-scale studies on resistance gene distribution, diversification and genetic variation in pooled multi-drug resistance plasmids, and provides insight into the use of high throughput sequencing technology for microbial resistance gene detection.