Abstract

The mec gene of a number of clinical methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus isolates exhibiting a variety of heterogeneous expression modes was selectively inactivated by allelic replacement mutagenesis. While the resistance level of each of the transformants was reduced, the methicillin MIC for these transformants was well above the MIC for susceptible laboratory strains of S. aureus and was similar to the methicillin MIC for many contemporary clinical isolates which did not react with the mec-specific DNA probe but which showed a low or borderline level of resistance to methicillin. A number of those strains had no detectable beta-lactamase, and for about half of the isolates that did carry plasmid-borne beta-lactamase, elimination of the plasmid caused only partial reduction of the methicillin MIC or no reduction at all. The findings suggest that many contemporary strains of staphylococci harbor a combination of at least three distinct beta-lactam resistance mechanisms: (i) the mechanism related to the acquisition of the foreign mec gene and (ii) a beta-lactamase-dependent and (iii) a beta-lactamase-independent mechanism, each one of which can provide a certain degree of resistance against penicillinase-resistant beta-lactam antibiotics.

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