Emerging Infectious Diseases (Feb 2001)

Transferable Plasmid-Mediated Resistance to Streptomycin in Clinical Isolate of Yersinia pestis

  • Annie Guiyoule,
  • Guy Gerbaud,
  • Carmen Buchrieser,
  • Marc Galimand,
  • Lila Rahalison,
  • Suzanne Chanteau,
  • Patrice Courvalin,
  • Elisabeth Carniel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid0701.700043
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 43 – 48

Abstract

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Plasmid-mediated high-level resistance to multiple antibiotics was reported in a clinical isolate of Yersinia pestis in Madagascar in 1997. We describe a second Y. pestis strain with high-level resistance to streptomycin, isolated from a human case of bubonic plague in Madagascar. The resistance determinants were carried by a self-transferable plasmid that could conjugate at high frequencies to other Y. pestis isolates. The plasmid and the host bacterium were different from those previously associated with multiple-drug resistance, indicating that acquisition of resistance plasmids is occurring in this bacterial species. Emergence of resistance to streptomycin in Y. pestis represents a critical public health problem since this antibiotic is used as the first-line treatment against plague in many countries.

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