| Literature DB >> 25545311 |
David Boyd1, Geoffrey Taylor2, Jeff Fuller2, Elizabeth Bryce3, Joanne Embree4, Denise Gravel5, Kevin Katz6, Pamela Kibsey7, Magdalena Kuhn8, Joanne Langley9, Laura Mataseje1, Robyn Mitchell5, Diane Roscoe3, Andrew Simor10, Eva Thomas11, Nathalie Turgeon12, Michael Mulvey1.
Abstract
The usefulness of carbapenems for gram-negative infections is becoming compromised by organisms harboring carbapenemases, enzymes which can hydrolyze the drug. Currently KPC (class A), NDM (class B), and OXA-48 types (class D) are the most globally widespread carbapenemases. However, among the GES-type class A extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs) there are variants that hydrolyze carbapenems, with blaGES-5 being the most common. Two Escherichia coli and two Serratia marcescens harboring blaGES-5 on plasmids were isolated by the Canadian Nosocomial Infection Surveillance Program (CNISP) from four different patients in a single hospital over a 2-year period. Complete sequencing of the blaGES-5 plasmids indicated that all four had nearly identical backbones consisting of genes for replication, partitioning, and stability, but contained variant accessory regions consisting of mobile elements and antimicrobial resistance genes. The plasmids were of a novel replicon type, but belonged to the MOBQ1 group based on relaxase sequences, and appeared to be mobilizable, but not self-transmissible. Considering the time periods of bacterial isolation, it would appear the blaGES-5 plasmid has persisted in an environmental niche for at least 2 years in the hospital. This has implications for infection control and clinical care when it is transferred to clinically relevant gram-negative organisms.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25545311 DOI: 10.1089/mdr.2014.0205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Drug Resist ISSN: 1076-6294 Impact factor: 3.431