Publication: New mutations and horizontal transfer of rpoB among rifampin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae from four Spanish hospitals
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publishers
Abstract
A total of 103 (0.7%) of 14,236 Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates collected in four Spanish hospitals from 1989 to 2003 were resistant to rifampin (MICs, 4 to 512 microg/ml). Only sixty-one (59.2%) of these isolates were available for molecular characterization. Resistance was mostly related to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in adult patients and to conjunctivitis in children. Thirty-six different pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns were identified among resistant isolates, five of which were related to international clones (Spain23F-1, Spain6B-2, Spain9V-3, Spain14-5, and clone C of serotype 19F), and accounted for 49.2% of resistant isolates. Single sense mutations at cluster N or I of the rpoB gene were found in 39 isolates, while double mutations, either at cluster I, at clusters I and II, or at clusters N and III, were found in 14 isolates. The involvement of the mutations in rifampin resistance was confirmed by genetic transformation. Single mutations at clusters N and I conferred MICs of 2 microg/ml and 4 to 32 microg/ml, respectively. Eight isolates showed high degrees of nucleotide sequence variations (2.3 to 10.8%) in rpoB, suggesting a recombinational origin for these isolates, for which viridans group streptococci are their potential gene donors. Although the majority of rifampin-resistant isolates were isolated from individual patients without temporal or geographical relationships, the clonal dissemination of rifampin-resistant isolates was observed among 12 HIV-infected patients in the two hospitals with higher rates of resistance.
Description
Keywords
MeSH Terms
Amino Acid Sequence Anti-Bacterial Agents Base Sequence DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases Drug Resistance, Bacterial Hospitals Humans Microbial Sensitivity Tests Molecular Sequence Data Phylogeny Pneumococcal Infections Rifampin Sequence Analysis, DNA Spain Streptococcus pneumoniae Gene Transfer, Horizontal Mutation
DeCS Terms
Bibliographic citation
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2005 Jun;49(6):2237-45.








