| Literature DB >> 22485109 |
Rafael Cantón1, José María González-Alba, Juan Carlos Galán.
Abstract
CTX-M β-lactamases are considered a paradigm in the evolution of a resistance mechanism. Incorporation of different chromosomal bla(CTX-M) related genes from different species of Kluyvera has derived in different CTX-M clusters. In silico analyses have shown that this event has occurred at least nine times; in CTX-M-1 cluster (3), CTX-M-2 and CTX-M-9 clusters (2 each), and CTX-M-8 and CTX-M-25 clusters (1 each). This has been mainly produced by the participation of genetic mobilization units such as insertion sequences (ISEcp1 or ISCR1) and the later incorporation in hierarchical structures associated with multifaceted genetic structures including complex class 1 integrons and transposons. The capture of these bla(CTX-M) genes from the environment by highly mobilizable structures could have been a random event. Moreover, after incorporation within these structures, β-lactam selective force such as that exerted by cefotaxime and ceftazidime has fueled mutational events underscoring diversification of different clusters. Nevertheless, more variants of CTX-M enzymes, including those not inhibited by β-lactamase inhibitors such as clavulanic acid (IR-CTX-M variants), only obtained under in in vitro experiments, are still waiting to emerge in the clinical setting. Penetration and the later global spread of CTX-M producing organisms have been produced with the participation of the so-called "epidemic resistance plasmids" often carried in multi-drug resistant and virulent high-risk clones. All these facts but also the incorporation and co-selection of emerging resistance determinants within CTX-M producing bacteria, such as those encoding carbapenemases, depict the currently complex pandemic scenario of multi-drug resistant isolates.Entities:
Keywords: ISCR1; ISEcp1; Kluyvera spp.; antibiotic selective force; bacterial clones; blaCTX-M genes; gene mobilization; plasmid
Year: 2012 PMID: 22485109 PMCID: PMC3316993 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2012.00110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1Factors fueling the emergence, maintenance, and spread of the CTX-M extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs).
Figure 2Hierarchical complexity of .
Initial description of CTX-M enzymes belonging to different CTX-M groups.
| Year | Country | CTX-M | CTX-M group | Comment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1986 | Japan | FEC-1 | CTX-M-1 | Matsumoto et al. ( | |
| 1989 | Germany | CTX-M-1 | CTX-M-1 | Bauernfeind et al. ( | |
| 1989 | Argentina | CTX-M-2 | CTX-M-2 | Bauernfeind et al. ( | |
| 1989 | France | MEN-1 | CTX-M-1 | Bernard et al. ( | |
| 1993 | Japan | Toho-1 | CTX-M-2 | Ishii et al. ( | |
| 1996 | Poland | CTX-M-3 | CTX-M-1 | Gniadkowski et al. ( | |
| 1999 | Taiwan | CTX-M-3 | CTX-M-1 | Different | Yan et al. ( |
| 1994 | France | CTX-M-9 | CTX-M-9 | A retrospective study showed presence of | Saladin et al. ( |
| 1996 | Spain | CTX-M-9 | CTX-M-9 | First description of CTX-M-14 in an | Sabaté et al. ( |
| 1996 | Brazil | CTX-M-9 | CTX-M-9 | Bonnet et al. ( | |
| 1997 | China | CTX-M-9 | CTX-M-9 | Chanawong et al., | |
| 1996 | Korea | CTX-M-14 | CTX-M-9 | Detected in | Pai et al. ( |
| 1997–1998 | China | CTX-M-14 | CTX-M-9 | Chanawong et al. ( | |
| 1998 | Taiwan | CTX-M-14 | CTX-M-9 | Ma et al. ( | |
| 1998 | Poland | CTX-M-15 | CTX-M-1 | A retrospective study showed the presence of | Baraniak et al. ( |
| 1999 | India | CTX-M-15 | CTX-M-1 | First description of this enzyme | Karim et al. ( |
| 2001 | United Kingdom | CTX-M-15 | CTX-M-1 | Spread in the community of | Mushtaq et al. ( |
| 1996–1997 | Brazil | CTX-M-8 | CTX-M-8 | Bonnet et al. ( | |
| 2000 | Canada | CTX-M-25 | CTX-M-25 | Munday et al. ( |
Figure 3Maximum likelihood trees of . (A) Phylogenetic tree of blaCTX-M genes (n = 109 and 17 chromosomal genes from Kluyvera) was obtained using PhyML_3.0 program (846 nt). The Tamura Nei nucleotide substitution model, used as evolutionary model was selected with the jModeltest program. The robustness of the relevant nodes was estimated with 1000 bootstrap pseudorandom replicates. We considered nodes valid when bootstrap value was >95%. (B) Phylogenetic tree of 16s rDNA of Kluyvera spp. (n = 55) and related species download of www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov, using PhyML_3.0 (1310 nt). The Hasegawa–Kishino–Yano was the evolutionary model inferred by jModeltest program and invariant site rate of 77.6% (HKY + I + G). We considered nodes valid when bootstrap value was >85%. The phylogenetic trees were represented using MEGA 5.0 program.
Figure 4Schematic representations of genetic environments surrounding .
Figure 5Alignment of upstream sequences in different . Different blaCTX-M genes belonging to the same cluster share an identical DNA sequence in upstream region, suggesting the same origin (A). Nevertheless, the loss of alignment among different upstream sequences from different blaCTX-M genes belonging to different clusters (included in the box squared) but theoretically derived from the same ancestral source in Kluyvera georgiana suggesting that these clusters had different sources (B).