Abstract

Effective surveillance and management of pathogenic Escherichia coli relies on robust and reproducible typing methods such as multilocus sequence typing (MLST). Typing of E. coli by MLST enables tracking of pathogenic clones that are known to carry virulence factors or spread resistance, such as the globally-prevalent ST131 lineage. Standard MLST for E. coli requires sequencing of seven alleles, or a whole genome, and can take several days. Here, we have developed and validated a nucleic-acid-based MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry (MS) method for MLST as a rapid alternative to sequencing that requires minimal operator expertise. Identification of alleles was 99.6% concordant with sequencing. We employed MLST by MALDI-TOF MS to investigate diversity among 62 E. coli isolates from Sydney, Australia, carrying a bla CMY-2-like gene on an IncI1 plasmid to determine whether any dominant clonal lineages are associated with the spread of this globally-disseminated resistance gene. Thirty-four known sequence types were identified, including lineages associated with human disease, animal and environmental sources. This suggests that the dissemination of bla CMY-2-like-genes is more complex than the simple spread of successful pathogenic clones. E. coli MLST by MALDI-TOF MS, employed here for the first time, can be utilised as an automated tool for large-scale population analyses or for targeted screening for known high-risk clones in a diagnostic setting.

Highlights

  • Primers linking the blaCMY-2-like gene to the IncI1 backbone [25] and/or S1 nuclease digestion/pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and hybridisation with IncI1 and blaCMY-2 probes, as described previously [26], were used to confirm the genetic location of the blaCMY-2-like gene

  • Rapid and reproducible typing of E. coli is essential for effective infection control and for surveillance of known virulent and/or resistant subtypes

  • We showed that full E. coli multilocus sequence typing (MLST) by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry (MS) is over 99% concordant with conventional MLST by DNA sequencing

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Summary

Introduction

Typing based on multiple-locus variable number tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) [3, 4] is PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0143446 November 20, 2015

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