Abstract

Stenotrophomonas can survive in a wide range of environments and is considered an opportunistic pathogen. Because of its intrinsic resistance to beta-lactams, this genus is considered irrelevant in studies addressing the environmental spread of antimicrobial resistance genes of medical importance. Consequently, studies on environmental Stenotrophomonas carrying acquired carbapenemase-encoding genes are scarce, though not inexistent. Here, we investigated the frequency and diversity of Stenotrophomonas spp. carrying genes encoding carbapenemases of medical relevance in coastal waters with distinct pollution degrees over one year. Among 319 isolates recovered, 220 (68.9%) showed blaKPC. The frequency of blaKPC-positive Stenotrophomonas spp. was not correlated with thermotolerant counts in coastal waters evaluated. All isolates were susceptible to minocycline, levofloxacin, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. PFGE typing of 101 blaKPC-positive isolates revealed 55 pulsotypes with 5 subtypes, all of which carried the blaKPC-2 variant. Interspecies differentiation of pulsotypes’ representatives revealed 55 isolates belonging to the S. maltophilia complex (91.7%) and 5 S. acidaminiphila (8.3%). The blaKPC-2 gene was more frequently harbored on transposable elements found in enterobacteria of clinical origin, especially Tn4401b. Even though beta-lactams are no therapeutic options to treat Stenotrophomonas infections, the occurrence of a highly relevant antimicrobial resistance determinant harbored on mobile genetic elements in a diverse collection of these ubiquitous microorganisms is noteworthy. Therefore, Stenotrophomonas may act as acceptor, stable reservoirs, and potential vectors of antimicrobial resistance in environmental settings, especially aquatic matrices, and should not be neglected.

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