Abstract

Extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs) of the CTX-M type are increasingly being reported worldwide, with more than 90 known variants. Clinical Escherichia coli isolate Bre-1 was isolated in 2009 and displayed an unusual ESBL phenotype, made of a synergy image between expanded cephalosporins and clavulanic acid discs and susceptibility to penicillins. E. coli Bre-1 harbored a novel CTX-M-encoding gene, designated bla(CTX-M-93). CTX-M-93 differed from CTX-M-27 by only a single L169Q substitution. Compared to CTX-M-27, CTX-M-93 conferred higher MICs of ceftazidime for E. coli (MIC of 8 versus 1.5 μg/ml) and decreased MICs of other expanded-cephalosporins (MIC of cefotaxime of 1 versus 32 μg/ml) and penicillins (MIC of ticarcillin of 0.5 versus >256 μg/ml). A comparison of enzymatic properties revealed that the L169Q substitution led to a decreased Km for ceftazidime (25.5 versus 330 μM) but decreased hydrolytic activity against good substrates, such as cefotaxime (kcat of 0.6 versus 113 s(-1)), probably owing to the alteration of the omega loop positioning during the catalytic process. The blaCTX-M-93 gene was surrounded by the ISEcp1 and IS903 elements and inserted onto a 150-kb non-self-transferrable IncF-type plasmid. E. coli Bre-1 belongs to phylogroup D and is of multilocus sequence type (MLST) 624, a sequence type found only in rare Spanish CTX-M-14-producing E. coli isolates. We have characterized a novel CTX-M variant, CTX-M-93, lacking significant penicillin hydrolysis but with increased ceftazidime hydrolysis.

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