Abstract

The linezolid resistance mediated by optrA has exhibited an increasing trend among Gram-positive bacteria, which greatly limits the treatment options for severe bacterial infections. However, the prevalence of optrA was usually underestimated based on the existing screening methods. In this study, we used a traditional method and an improved method that included a high-salinity condition treatment after enrichment to screen for optrA-carrying bacteria from stool samples from 1,018 healthy donors in Hangzhou, China. The fecal carriage rate of optrA-carrying bacteria was 19.25% when screened by the improved method (196/1,018), which was much higher than that of the traditional method at 5.89% (60/1,018). Enterococci were the majority of the optrA-positive isolates, while five nonenterococcal isolates were also obtained, including two Streptococcus gallolyticus, one Vagococcus lutrae, one Lactococcus garvieae, and one Lactococcus formosensis isolate. Whole-genome sequencing analysis identified four novel OptrA variants, IDKKGPM, IDKKGP, KLDK, and EYDDI, in these isolates, whose optrA-flanking regions with a fexA gene downstream were bounded by different insertion sequences. In conclusion, our optimized method displayed high sensitivity in the detection of optrA-positive bacteria in fecal samples and revealed a high carriage rate in a healthy population. Although enterococci are dominant, multiple optrA-carrying Gram-positive bacteria were also found. IMPORTANCE This study represented an optimized screening approach for the optrA gene, which is an important mechanism of antimicrobial resistance to linezolid as a last resort for the treatment of infections caused by multiresistant Gram-positive bacteria. We revealed a high fecal carriage rate of the optrA gene among adults by this method and reported the first identification of optrA in Lactococcus formosensis as well as the identification of this gene in Vagococcus lutrae and of the poxtA gene in Ligilactobacillus salivarius of human origin, suggesting the wide spread of the optrA gene in the Gram-positive bacterial community.

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