Abstract

Escherichia coli is one of the most common pathogens in nosocomial and community-acquired infections in humans. Fosfomycin is a broad-spectrum antibiotic which inhibits peptidoglycan synthesis responsible for bacterial cell wall formation. Although low, the exact E. coli susceptibility to fosfomycin as well as the mechanisms of resistance in the population from Mainland China are mostly unknown. 1109 non-duplicate clinical E. coli strains isolated from urine, sputum, blood and pus samples in 20 widely dispersed tertiary hospitals from Mainland China were collected from July 2009 to June 2010, followed by determination of minimum inhibitory concentrations of fosfomycin. Detection of the murA, glpT, uhpT, fosA, fosA 3 and fosC genes was performed in fosfomycin non-susceptible E. coli strains and conjugation experiments were employed to determine the mobility of fosA 3 gene. In this study, 7.8% (86/1109) E. coli strains were fosfomycin non-susceptible. Amino acid substitutions in GlpT and MurA were found in six and four E.coli strains, respectively, while the uhpT gene was absent in eighteen E.coli strains. Twenty-nine isolates carried the transferable plasmid with the fosA 3 gene at high frequencies of around 10−6 to 10−7 per donor cell in broth mating. The majority of isolates were susceptible to fosfomycin, showing that the drug is still viable in clinical applications. Also, the main mechanism of E. coli resistance in Mainland China was found to be due to the presence of the fosA 3 gene.

Highlights

  • Escherichia coli is one of the most common pathogens in nosocomial and community-acquired infections in humans

  • Detection of the murA, glpT, uhpT, fosA, fosA3 and fosC genes was performed in fosfomycin non-susceptible E. coli strains, and the primers used are listed in Table 1 [16,17,18]

  • Fosfomycin has been introduced in clinical practice for about 30 years

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Summary

Introduction

Escherichia coli is one of the most common pathogens in nosocomial and community-acquired infections in humans. Fosfomycin enters the E. coli cell by using one of two transport systems: the glycerol-3-phosphate transport system (GlpT) or the hexose. Fosfomycin Resistance in Mainland China phosphate transport system (UlpT) [3,4]. The prevalence of fosfomycin resistance in E. coli remains low [5,6,7,8], but several resistance mechanisms to fosfomycin have been reported. Mutations in the glpT or uhpT genes can decrease the uptake of fosfomycin via the transport systems and give rise to fosfomycin resistance [4,9,10]. Little is known about the rate of resistance or E. coli mechanisms of resistance to fosfomycin in Mainland China. Here we investigated several fosfomycin resistance mutations and the mobility of the fosA3 gene

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