Abstract

The staphylococcal chromosome cassette mec cannot solely explain the multiresistance phenotype or the relatively mild virulence profile of hospital-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (HA-MRSA). This study reports that several multiresistant HA-MRSA strains differently expressed genes that may support antibiotic resistance, modify the bacterial surface and influence the pathogenic process. Genes encoding efflux pumps (norA, arsB, emrB) and the macrolide resistance gene ermA were found to be commonly expressed by HA-MRSA strains, but not in the archetypal MRSA strain COL. At equivalent cell density, the agr system was considerably less activated in all MRSA strains (including COL) in comparison with a prototypic antibiotic-susceptible strain. These results are in contrast to those observed in recent community-acquired MRSA isolates and may partly explain how multiresistant HA-MRSA persist in the hospital setting.

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