Abstract

BackgroundThe spread of drug-resistant bacterial pathogens poses a major threat to global health. It is widely recognised that the widespread use of antibiotics has generated selective pressures that have driven the emergence of resistant strains. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) was first observed in 1960, less than one year after the introduction of this second generation beta-lactam antibiotic into clinical practice. Epidemiological evidence has always suggested that resistance arose around this period, when the mecA gene encoding methicillin resistance carried on an SCCmec element, was horizontally transferred to an intrinsically sensitive strain of S. aureus.ResultsWhole genome sequencing a collection of the first MRSA isolates allows us to reconstruct the evolutionary history of the archetypal MRSA. We apply Bayesian phylogenetic reconstruction to infer the time point at which this early MRSA lineage arose and when SCCmec was acquired. MRSA emerged in the mid-1940s, following the acquisition of an ancestral type I SCCmec element, some 14 years before the first therapeutic use of methicillin.ConclusionsMethicillin use was not the original driving factor in the evolution of MRSA as previously thought. Rather it was the widespread use of first generation beta-lactams such as penicillin in the years prior to the introduction of methicillin, which selected for S. aureus strains carrying the mecA determinant. Crucially this highlights how new drugs, introduced to circumvent known resistance mechanisms, can be rendered ineffective by unrecognised adaptations in the bacterial population due to the historic selective landscape created by the widespread use of other antibiotics.

Highlights

  • The spread of drug-resistant bacterial pathogens poses a major threat to global health

  • Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) belong to a diverse clone Preserved in the culture collection of the Staphylococcal Reference Laboratory at Public Health England are representatives of the very first MRSA identified

  • All the isolates belonged to CC8 MRSA and were originally isolated between 1960 and the late 1970s, and included eight isolates from the original study describing MRSA in 1961 [3]

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Summary

Introduction

The spread of drug-resistant bacterial pathogens poses a major threat to global health. It is widely recognised that the widespread use of antibiotics has generated selective pressures that have driven the emergence of resistant strains. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) was first observed in 1960, less than one year after the introduction of this second generation beta-lactam antibiotic into clinical practice. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has been identified as one of the major risk pathogens associated with the development of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). At the same time as its use was Methicillin (Celbenin), a semi-synthetic β-lactam, was introduced in the UK in 1959 to circumvent growing penicillin resistance in S. aureus, associated with the acquisition of a β-lactamase enzyme, blaZ [2]. Following the introduction of methicillin into clinical practice in the UK, the Staphylococcal Reference Laboratory in Colindale (London, England) screened S. aureus isolates for evidence of resistance to this antibiotic [3]. More than 5000 S. aureus strains were assessed in the period

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