Abstract

Vancomycin-resistance in enterococci (VRE) is associated with isolates within ST18, ST17, ST78 Enterococcus faecium (Efm) and ST6 Enterococcus faecalis (Efs) human adapted lineages. Despite of its global spread, vancomycin resistance rates in enterococcal populations greatly vary temporally and geographically. Portugal is one of the European countries where Tn1546 (vanA) is consistently found in a variety of environments. A comprehensive multi-hierarchical analysis of VRE isolates (75 Efm and 29 Efs) from Portuguese hospitals and aquatic surroundings (1996–2008) was performed to clarify the local dynamics of VRE. Clonal relatedness was established by PFGE and MLST while plasmid characterization comprised the analysis of known relaxases, rep initiator proteins and toxin-antitoxin systems (TA) by PCR-based typing schemes, RFLP comparison, hybridization and sequencing. Tn1546 variants were characterized by PCR overlapping/sequencing. Intra- and inter-hospital dissemination of Efm ST18, ST132 and ST280 and Efs ST6 clones, carrying rolling-circle (pEFNP1/pRI1) and theta-replicating (pCIZ2-like, Inc18, pHTβ-like, two pRUM-variants, pLG1-like, and pheromone-responsive) plasmids was documented. Tn1546 variants, mostly containing ISEf1 or IS1216, were located on plasmids (30–150 kb) with a high degree of mosaicism and heterogeneous RFLP patterns that seem to have resulted from the interplay between broad host Inc18 plasmids (pIP501, pRE25, pEF1), and narrow host RepA_N plasmids (pRUM, pAD1-like). TAs of Inc18 (ω-ε-ζ) and pRUM (Axe-Txe) plasmids were infrequently detected. Some plasmid chimeras were persistently recovered over years from different clonal lineages. This work represents the first multi-hierarchical analysis of VRE, revealing a frequent recombinatorial diversification of a limited number of interacting clonal backgrounds, plasmids and transposons at local scale. These interactions provide a continuous process of parapatric clonalization driving a full exploration of the local adaptive landscape, which might assure long-term maintenance of resistant clones and eventually fixation of Tn1546 in particular geographic areas.

Highlights

  • Since its first description in the late 80’s, vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) have been increasingly reported worldwide, but presenting remarkable geographical and temporal differences in local rates [1,2,3]

  • While ST6 Enterococcus faecalis (Efs) was widely disseminated in all hospitals analyzed in this country [26], specific E. faecium (Efm) lineages were overrepresented in Coimbra (ST18) and Oporto (ST132, a single locus variant, SLV, of ST18)

  • This paper shows the local dynamics of Tn1546-vanA among Enterococci is shaped by horizontal genetic transfer of pRUM and Inc18 plasmids and by recombination-driven evolution of them within and between Efs and Efm clones

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Since its first description in the late 80’s, vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) have been increasingly reported worldwide, but presenting remarkable geographical and temporal differences in local rates (http://www.cddep.org/ResistanceMap/bug-drug/ EFa-VC) [1,2,3]. Despite E. faecium (Efm) being less frequently found than Enterococcus faecalis (Efs) in clinical isolates, it is far more frequently resistant to vancomycin, one of the last-line intravenous antibiotic resources for therapy. The rate of vancomycin-resistant E. faecalis (VREfs) has remained low, they are steadily increasing in both the US and in EU countries (http://www.cddep.org/ResistanceMap/bug-drug/ EFe-VC) [3]. The few studies in which plasmids carrying Tn1546 from human or animal isolates were characterized revealed they belong to plasmid families RepA_N (pheromoneresponsive plasmids and derivatives of pRUM and pLG1), Inc and pHTb [9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18] suggesting an apparent plasmid promiscuity of this transposon influencing its dissemination among enterococcal populations

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.