Literature DB >> 12435699

Emergence of tetracycline resistance in Helicobacter pylori: multiple mutational changes in 16S ribosomal DNA and other genetic loci.

Daiva Dailidiene1, M Teresita Bertoli, Jolanta Miciuleviciene, Asish K Mukhopadhyay, Giedrius Dailide, Mario Alberto Pascasio, Limas Kupcinskas, Douglas E Berg.   

Abstract

Tetracycline is useful in combination therapies against the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori. We found 6 tetracycline-resistant (Tet(r)) strains among 159 clinical isolates (from El Salvador, Lithuania, and India) and obtained the following four results: (i) 5 of 6 Tet(r) isolates contained one or two nucleotide substitutions in one part of the primary tetracycline binding site in 16S rRNA (AGA(965-967) [Escherichia coli coordinates] changed to gGA, AGc, guA, or gGc [lowercase letters are used to represent the base changes]), whereas the sixth (isolate Ind75) retained AGA(965-967); (ii) PCR products containing mutant 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) alleles transformed recipient strains to Tet(r) phenotypes, but transformants containing alleles with single substitutions (gGA and AGc) were less resistant than their Tet(r) parents; (iii) each of 10 Tet(r) mutants of reference strain 26695 (in which mutations were induced with metronidazole, a mutagenic anti-H. pylori agent) contained the normal AGA(965-967) sequence; and (iv) transformant derivatives of Ind75 and of one of the Tet(r) 26695 mutants that had acquired mutant rDNA alleles were resistant to tetracycline at levels higher than those to which either parent strain was resistant. Thus, tetracycline resistance in H. pylori results from an accumulation of changes that may affect tetracycline-ribosome affinity and/or other functions (perhaps porins or efflux pumps). We suggest that the rarity of tetracycline resistance among clinical isolates reflects this need for multiple mutations and perhaps also the deleterious effects of such mutations on fitness. Formally equivalent mutations with small but additive effects are postulated to contribute importantly to traits such as host specificity and virulence and to H. pylori's great genetic diversity.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12435699      PMCID: PMC132778          DOI: 10.1128/AAC.46.12.3940-3946.2002

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


  48 in total

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  37 in total

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