| Literature DB >> 25932021 |
Marcus H Wong1, Yi Li2, Edward W Chan1, Sheng Chen1.
Abstract
The functional relationship between the detection of carbapenemase activity and phenotypic resistance in Gram-negative bacterial pathogens is often ill-defined. To address this issue, we developed a two-tiered Modified Hodge Test approach for carbapenemase detection and typing, in which the use of Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain PAO1 and Escherichia coli as indicator strains conferred two levels of sensitivities to carbapenemases. When applied alongside PCR genotyping tests for existence of known carbapenemase genes in 92 carbapenem resistant clinical isolates, this method is extremely useful in elucidating the relative role by which different enzymes contributed to the prevalent carbapenem-resistance phenotypes. With this study approach, we showed that the proportion of P. aeruginosa and Acinetobacter baumannii strains whose carbapenem resistance phenotypes could at least be partially attributed to carbapenemase were 34 and 89%, respectively. Our data also facilitates detailed functional categorization of carbapenem resistance phenotypes on the basis of the types and activities of detectable carbapenemase produced by the test organism. For example, six A. baumannii isolates harboring the bla OXA-51/23-like gene without detectable enzymatic activities were identified, suggesting that other resistance mechanisms may be involved. On the other hand, there were seven P. aeruginosa strains which produced carbapenemase phenotype without harboring known carbapenemase genes, inferring the existence of some hitherto unknown resistance determinants. Findings in this work therefore provide a comprehensive view on the cellular basis of carbapenem resistance phenotypes in major Gram-negative bacterial species, paving the way for development of novel strategies to reverse the effects of the major resistance mechanisms concerned.Entities:
Keywords: Acinetobacter baumannii; Pseudomonas aeruginosa; carbapenem resistance; genotyping; two-tiered Modified Hodge Test
Year: 2015 PMID: 25932021 PMCID: PMC4399324 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.00293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Primers used in this study.
| β-lactamase | Forward sequence (5′–3′) | Reverse sequence (5′–3′) | Amplicon size (bp) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TAATGCTTTGATCGGCCTTG | TGGATTGCACTTCATCTTGG | 353 | ||
| GATCGGATTGGAGAACCAGA | ATTTCTGACCGCATTTCCAT | 501 | ||
| GGTTAGTTGGCCCCCTTAAA | AGTTGAGCGAAAAGGGGATT | 246 | ||
| AAGTATTGGGGCTTGTGCTG | CCCCTCTGCGCTCTACATAC | 599 | ||
| GGAATAGAGTGGCTTAAYTCTC | GGTTTAAYAAAACAACCACC | 232 | ||
| GATGGTGTTTGGTCGCATA | CGAATGCGCAGCACCAG | 390 | ||
| GCGTGGTTAAGGATGAACAC | CATCAAGTTCAACCCAACCG | 438 | ||
| TACAAGGGATTCGGCATCG | TAATGGCCTGTTCCCATGTG | 570 | ||
| CGTCTAGTTCTGCTGTCTTG | CTTGTCATCCTTGTTAGGCG | 798 | ||
| AAAATCTGGGTACGCAAACG | ACATTATCCGCTGGAACAGG | 271 | ||
| GCTTGTCTTCGCTTGCTAACG | CGTTCGGCTGGATTGATTTG | 699 | ||
| TCGACACACCTTGGTCTGAA | AACTTCCAACTTTGCCATGC | 477 | ||
| GGTTTGGCGATCTGGTTTTC | CGGAATGGCTCATCACGATC | 621 | ||
| ACGTCGCTGATGCTCAG | CCTGCGTCATCAGAGACCTC | 1143 | ||
Summary of genotypic and phenotypic characteristics of 106 Gram-negative bacterial isolates tested in this study.
| Bacterial species tested (Carbapenemases) | Meropenem MIC(μg/ml) | No. of isolates | No. of positive Modified Hodge Test (MHT) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ≥32 | 3 | 3 | 3 | |
| 16 – ≥32 | 4 | 4 | 0 | |
| <0.5 | 14∗ | 0 3 | 0 0 | |
| 16 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
| 16 | 1 | 1 | 0 | |
| Total | 106 | 63 | 22 | |
Categorization of carbapenem susceptibility phenotypes.
| Category | Carbapenem susceptibility phenotypes | MHT | MHT-PAO1 | PCR-genotyping | Implication | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | S | – | – | + | The carbapenemase gene detectable by genotyping does not produce carbapenemase | 14 carbapenem sensitive |
| II | R | – | – | – | Carbapenem resistance not due to carbapenemase | 21 carbapenem resistant |
| III | R | +/– | + | – | Carbapenem resistance due to a combination of resistance mechanisms including an unknown carbapenemase or overexpression of AmpC | Seven |
| IV | R | + | + | + | Carbapenem resistance due to carbapenemase encoded by the gene detectable by genotyping | Various |
| V | R | – | + | + | Carbapenem resistance due to a combination of resistance mechanisms including a weakly detected carbapenemase | |
| VI | I | – | + | + | Carbapenem resistance due to a weakly detected carbapenemase encoded by the gene detectable by genotyping | Three |