Abstract

As part of a surveillance programme of the prevalence of antibiotic resistance, the faecal bacteria of healthy people ( n = 1348) were examined, and the antibiotic resistance of the Escherichia coli strains determined. One strain out of 142 amoxycillin-resistant isolates, E. coli strain 1662, was also resistant to piperacillin-tazobactam but susceptible to amoxycillin-clavulanic acid. The piperacillin-tazobactam resistance determinant was transferable to standard E. coli strains by conjugation. However, the strain produced a β-lactamase with several characteristics very similar to those of the TEM-1 β-lactamase, i.e. p I of 5.4, an M r value of 22 000 and a comparable substrate profile. The enzyme was as efficiently inhibited by clavulanic acid and tazobactam as the TEM-1 and TEM-2 β-lactamases but more than the amoxycillin-clavulanic acid-resistant TRC-1 enzyme. The transferable resistance to piperacillin-tazobactam appears to be mediated by a novel resistance mechanism that has previously not been described.

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