Abstract

ABSTRACTThe convergence of hypervirulence to carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae (CRKP) in a highly transmissible ST11 clone poses a great challenge to public health and anti-infection therapy. Recently, we revealed that an expanding repertoire of diversified KPC-2-producing plasmids occurs in these high-risk clones. Here, we report a clinical case infected with a rare isolate of ST437 CRKP, K186, which exhibited KPC-2 production. Apart from its 5,322,657-bp long chromosome, whole-genome sequencing of strain K186 elucidated three distinct resistance plasmids (designated pK186_1, pK186_2, and pK186_KPC, respectively). Unlike the prevalently larger form of KPC-2-producing plasmids (~120 to ~170 kb) earlier we observed, pK186_KPC is an IncN-type, small plasmid of 26,012bp in length. Combined with the colinear alignment of plasmid genome, the analyses of insertion sequences further suggested that this carbapenem-resistant pK186_KPC might arise from the cointegration of its ancestral IncN and IncFII plasmids, exclusively relying on IS26-based transposition events. Taken together, the result represents an unusual example of blaKPC-2-bearing small plasmids, and highlights an ongoing arsenal of diversified carriers benefiting the transferability of KPC-2 carbapenem resistance.IMPORTANCE A rare ST437 isolate termed K186 was clinically determined which was unlike ST11, the dominant sequence type of CRKP. Whole-genome sequencing enabled us to discover three distinct resistance plasmids, namely, pK186_1, pK186_2, and pK186_KPC. Among them, pK186_KPC appears as a unique plasmid ~26 kb in size, much smaller than the prevalent forms (~120 to ~170 kb). Intriguingly, genetic analysis suggests that it might originate from Proteus mirabilis. This result constitutes an additional example of differentiated plasmid vehicles dedicated to the emergence and dissemination of KPC-2 carbapenem resistance.

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