| Literature DB >> 26308027 |
Wei Jia1,2, Caiyun Li3,4, Haiyun Zhang2,5, Gang Li1,2, Xiaoming Liu6, Jun Wei7,8.
Abstract
The objective of this study was to explore the molecular epidemiology and the genetic support of clinical multidrug resistant (MDR) Acinetobacter baumannii (A. baumannii) isolates in an ICU ward of a comprehensive hospital. A total of 102 non-duplicate drug-resistant A. baumannii isolates were identified and 93 (91.1%) of them were MDR strains. Molecular analysis demonstrated that carbapenemase genes blaOXA-23 and blaOXA-51 were presented in all 93 MDR isolates (100%), but other carbapenemase genes, including blaOXA-24, blaOXA-58, blaIMP-1, blaIMP-4, blaSIM, and blaVIM genes were completely absent in all isolates. In addition, genes of AdeABC efflux system were detected in 88.2% (90/102) isolates. Interestingly, an addition to efflux pump inhibitor, reserpine could significantly enhance the susceptibility of MDR isolates to moxifloxacin, cefotaxime, and imipenem (p < 0.01). Clonal relationship analysis further grouped these clinical drug-resistant isolates into nine clusters, and the MDR strains were mainly in clusters A, B, C, and D, which include 16, 13, 25, and 15 isolates, respectively. This study demonstrated that clinical isolates carrying carbapenemase-encoding genes blaOXA-23 and AdeABC efflux pump genes are the main prevalent MDR A. baumannii, and the co-expression of oxacillinase and efflux pump proteins are thus considered to be the important reason for the prevalence of this organism in the ICU of this hospital.Entities:
Keywords: Acinetobacter baumannii; efflux pump; multidrug resistance; nosocomial infections; oxacillinase
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26308027 PMCID: PMC4555330 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph120810079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Sequences of PCR primer sets for genes of carbapenemase and ABC efflux pumps of A. baumannii used in this study.
| Target genes | Primer sets | Primer sequence (5′→3′) | Amplicon Size (bp) |
|---|---|---|---|
| GCATTGGCGGCGAAAGTCA | 921 | ||
| CTCGCACCGAATGTCTGGC | |||
| TACAAGGGATTCGGCATCG | 741 | ||
| TAATGGCCTGTTCCCATGTG | |||
| TTATGGAGCAACCGATGT | 920 | ||
| CAAAAGTCCCGCTCCAACGA | |||
| ATCCAAGCAGCAAGCGCGTTA | 474 | ||
| AGGCGTGCTGCTGCAACGACTTGT | |||
| CTACCGCAGCAGAGTCTTTG | 879 | ||
| AACCAGTTTTGCCTTACCAT | |||
| GATGTGTCATAGTATTCGTCG | 774 | ||
| TCACAACAACTAAAAGCACTG | |||
| TTCCCCTAACATGAATTTGT | 828 | ||
| GTACTAATCAAAGTTGTGAA | |||
| AAGTATTGGGGCTTGTGCTG | 800 | ||
| CCCCTCTGCGCTCTACATAC | |||
| TAATGCTTTGATCGGCCTTG | 760 | ||
| TGGATTGCACTTCATCTTGG | |||
| GGCGTATTGGGCAATCTTTTGT | 1157 | ||
| GTCACCGACTTTCAAGCCTTTG | |||
| TGGCGGAATGAAGTATGT | 1323 | ||
| GCAGTGCGGCAGGTTAG | |||
| GACAATCGTATCTCGTGGACTC | 1331 | ||
| AGCAATTTTCTGGTCAGTTTCC | |||
| TCACATGGCTATCTACGGTTGG | 538 | ||
| TGAAGGCATGAGTGTTATTCGG | |||
| GTGGACGTTAGGTCAAGTTCTG | 949 | ||
| TGTTATCTTTTGCGGCTGTATT |
The susceptibilities of clinical A. baumannii isolates to tested antibiotics (N = 102).
| Antibiotics | Drug-resistant isolates | MIC ranges (mg/mL) | Drug-susceptible isolates |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trimethoprim/sulfamethoazole | 102/102, (100%) | 4–32/64 | 0/102, (0.0%) |
| Piperacillin | 99/102, (97.1%) | 128–512 | 3/102, (2.9%) |
| Ceftriaxome | 99/102, (97.1%) | 16–256 | 3/102, (2.9%) |
| Ampicillin-sulbactam | 98/102, (96.1%) | 8–256/8 | 4/102, (3.9%) |
| Ticarcillin-clavulanicac | 98/102, (96.1%) | 32–1224/1 | 4/102, (3.9%) |
| Cefepime | 94/102, (92.2%) | 8–512 | 8/102, (7.8%) |
| Ceftazidime | 94/102, (92.2%) | 4–128 | 8/102, (7.8%) |
| Levofloxacin | 92/102, (90.2%) | 2–64 | 10/102, (9.8%) |
| Tobramycin | 90/102, (88.2%) | 4–256 | 12/102, (9.8%) |
| Imipenem | 83/102, (81.4%) | 2–64 | 19/102, (18.6%) |
| Polymyxin B | 13/102, (12.7%) | 1–16 | 89/102, (87.3%) |
Distribution of Carbapenemase genes and Ade efflux pump genes in the 102 clinical drug-resistant A. baumannii isolates in this study (Number of isolates harboring Carbapenemase gene/number of isolates containing efflux pump gene).
| Genes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 93/78 | 93/73 | 93/83 | 93/78 | 93/76 | |
| 0/78 | 0/73 | 0/83 | 0/78 | 0/76 | |
| 93/78 | 93/73 | 93/83 | 93/78 | 93/76 | |
| 0/78 | 0/73 | 0/83 | 0/78 | 0/76 | |
| 0/78 | 0/73 | 0/83 | 0/78 | 0/76 | |
| 0/78 | 0/73 | 0/83 | 0/78 | 0/76 | |
| 0/78 | 0/73 | 0/83 | 0/78 | 0/76 | |
| 0/78 | 0/73 | 0/83 | 0/78 | 0/76 | |
| 0/78 | 0/73 | 0/83 | 0/78 | 0/76 |
Figure 1Impact of reserpine on the susceptibility of MDR A. baumannii to antibiotics. The clinical drug-resistant A. baumannii isolates were culture in the presence of cefotaxime, moxifloxacin, or imipenem with or without 25 mg/L of efflux pump inhibitor reserpine, the MICs were determined by agar dilution method. (a) Representative images showed an enhanced inhibitory activity of indicated antibiotics in the presence of reserpine. (b) Effect of reserpine on the susceptibility of MDR A. baumannii to antibiotics. An addition of reserpine resulted in a significantly reduction of MICs of indicated antibiotics the clinical isolates (p < 0.01), indicative of an enhanced susceptibility to these antimicrobials. Compared to the corresponding reserpine absent group, ##: p < 0.01. Data represented the mean ± SD from three independent triplicated experiments (N = 102).
Distribution of AdeABC efflux pump genes in different groups of clinical drug-resistant A. baumannii isolates.
| Efflux pump | PFGE groups | Constituent ratio | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | B | C | D | E | Other | ||
| 11 | 12 | 18 | 5 | 3 | 19 | 68/102 (66.7%) | |
| 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 4/102 (3.9%) | |
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2/102 (1.9%) | |
| 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4/102 (3.9%) | |
| Other genotypes | 3 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 0 | 5 | 12/102 (11.8%) |
| Negative | 0 | 0 | 4 | 7 | 0 | 1 | 12/102 (11.7%) |
| Sum | 16 | 13 | 25 | 15 | 3 | 30 | 102/102 (100%) |