Literature DB >> 10770767

Novel beta-lactamase genes from two environmental isolates of Vibrio harveyi.

J W Teo1, A Suwanto, C L Poh.   

Abstract

Two ampicillin-resistant (Amp(r)) isolates of Vibrio harveyi, W3B and HB3, were obtained from the coastal waters of the Indonesian island of Java. Strain W3B was isolated from marine water near a shrimp farm in North Java while HB3 was from pristine seawater in South Java. In this study, novel beta-lactamase genes from W3B (bla(VHW-1)) and HB3 (bla(VHH-1)) were cloned and their nucleotide sequences were determined. An open reading frame (ORF) of 870 bp encoding a deduced protein of 290 amino acids (VHW-1) was revealed for the bla gene of strain W3B while an ORF of 849 bp encoding a 283-amino-acid protein (VHH-1) was deduced for bla(VHH-1). At the DNA level, genes for VHW-1 and VHH-1 have a 97% homology, while at the protein level they have a 91% homology of amino acid sequences. Neither gene sequence showed homology to any other beta-lactamases in the databases. The deduced proteins were found to be class A beta-lactamases bearing low levels of homology (<50%) to other beta-lactamases of the same class. The highest level of identity was obtained with beta-lactamases from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, i.e., PSE-1, PSE-4, and CARB-3, and Vibrio cholerae CARB-6. Our study showed that both strains W3B and HB3 possess an endogenous plasmid of approximately 60 kb in size. However, Southern hybridization analysis employing bla(VHW-1) as a gene probe demonstrated that the bla gene was not located in the plasmid. A total of nine ampicillin-resistant V. harveyi strains, including W3B and HB3, were examined by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of NotI-digested genomic DNA. Despite a high level of intrastrain genetic diversity, the bla(VHW-1) probe hybridized only to an 80- or 160-kb NotI genomic fragment in different isolates.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10770767      PMCID: PMC89860          DOI: 10.1128/AAC.44.5.1309-1314.2000

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother        ISSN: 0066-4804            Impact factor:   5.191


  26 in total

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