| Literature DB >> 26487554 |
Yang Deng1, Xuerui Bao2, Lili Ji3, Lei Chen4, Junyan Liu5, Jian Miao6, Dingqiang Chen7, Huawei Bian8, Yanmei Li9, Guangchao Yu10.
Abstract
As recently indiscriminate abuse of existing antibiotics in both clinical and veterinary treatment leads to proliferation of antibiotic resistance in microbes and poses a dilemma for the future treatment of such bacterial infection, antimicrobial resistance has been considered to be one of the currently leading concerns in global public health, and reported to widely spread and extended to a large variety of microorganisms. In China, as one of the currently worst areas for antibiotics abuse, the annual prescription of antibiotics, including both clinical and veterinary treatment, has approaching 140 gram per person and been roughly estimated to be 10 times higher than that in the United Kingdom, which is considered to be a potential area for the emergence of "Super Bugs". Based on the integrons surveillance in Guangzhou, China in the past decade, this review thus aimed at summarizing the role of integrons in the perspective of both clinical setting and environment, with the focus on the occurrence and prevalence of class 1, 2 and 3 integrons.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26487554 PMCID: PMC4618277 DOI: 10.1186/s12941-015-0100-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Microbiol Antimicrob ISSN: 1476-0711 Impact factor: 3.944
Fig. 1Schematic representation of a class 1 integron. P1 promoter for transcription of gene cassettes, P2 second promoter that is usually inactive, int integrase gene, attI1 integration site, qacE partially deleted gene that encodes quaternary ammonium compound resistance, sulI sulphonamide resistance, orf5 unknown function, P promoters of the qacE△ and sulI genes, attC sequence on the gene cassette recognized by the integrase
Fig. 2Structure of the attI1 site. The essential part of the attI1 site is formed by the simple site, the strong binding site and the intervening sequence. For details see Hall et al. [7]
Fig. 3Integration and excision of gene cassettes by site-specific recombination. Intl encoded by the intl gene in the integron catalyses recombination between the attl1 site of the integron and/or the attC site(s) of gene cassette(s) resulting in insertion or excision of a cassette. One or more noncassette resistance genes may be inserted at the position of the 3′-CS. Horizontal arrows indicate the opposite orientations of intI and cassette-borne genes
Occurrence and prevalence of class 1 integron in Gram-negative microorganisms
| Date | Bacterial | Occurrence of class 1 integron and the array of gene cassettes | Sampling | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 |
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| Hiroshima prefecture, Japan; 2000–2004 | [ |
| 2002 |
| 36.2 % (34/94); | Animals, Japan | [ |
| 2000 |
| 44/176; | Thailand | [ |
| 2002 |
| 29.4 % (5/17); | Ireland | [ |
| 2004 |
| 62/378 | Ireland | [ |
| 2008 |
| 50/226 | Addenbrooke’s Hospital | [ |
| 2005 |
| 4/32 (12.5 %); | Meat and meat products, Norwey | [ |
| 2008 |
| 59.5 % (355/597) | South Thailand | [ |
| 2011 |
| Preliminary study in Guangzhou, China | [ | |
| 2009 |
| 45.8 % (54/118) | Preliminary study in Guangzhou, China | [ |
| 2008 |
| 1/30; | Canada | [ |
| 2004 |
| 22 % (20/93) | Kaohsiung Medical University | [ |
| 2013 |
| 43 % 37/182 | Guilan, Iran | [ |
| 2011 |
| 18/26 | Blood stream infections | [ |
| 2013 |
| 11.9 % (59) | Taiwan | [ |
| 2013 |
| 40.0 % (20) | Taiwan | [ |
| 2010 |
| High prevalence | Iran | [ |
| 2009 |
| 16/41 (39.02 %); | Hidalgo, Mexico | [ |
Occurrence and prevalence of class 1 integron in Gram-positive microorganisms
| Date | Bacterial | History | Description | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 |
| First class 1 integron evidence in G+ microorganisms | InCg on pCG4 (29-kb), identical to InC on pSA1700 | [ |
| 1999 |
| First class 1 integron report within |
| [ |
| 2002 |
| On pTET-3 (27.8-kb), with a novel | ||
| 2001–2004 |
| First class 2 integron evidence in G+ microorganisms and first report of class 1 integron on the species of | Three arrays ( | [ |
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| 2001–2002 |
| First class 1 integron report within | Array of | [ |
| 2004 |
| First class 1 integron report on | Such integrons carried various antibiotic resistance genes and may serve as the potentially large reservior of class 1 integron | [ |
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| 2001–2006 |
| First class 1 integron evidence from clinical G+ microorganisms from a large scale and a long study duration; first class 1 integron identification from clinical | Typically class 1 integrons were observed, with | [ |
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| 2009 |
| With 78 % homologous | [ | |
| 2013 |
| First class 1 integron report on the species of | With identification rate of class 1 integron as 40.5 % (81/200) | [ |
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Summary of different structures of class 2 integrons reported in previous studies
Occurrence and prevalence of class 2, 3, and 4 integrons in Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria
| Bacterial | Occurrence of integrons and the array of gene cassettes | Sampling | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Class 2 integrons | |||
|
| 7.4 % (31/417); | BfT-GermVet monitoring study, Germany, 2004–2006 | [ |
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| 34.9 % (52/149); II2 (Tn |
| [ |
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| 3.0 % (3/100) | Spain | [ |
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| 3.6 % (4/111); | Preliminary study, Guangzhou, China | [ |
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| One out of 322 | Irrigation water and associated sediments, El Paso, Presidio and Weslaco | [ |
| Coliforms | 2.7 % (5/183) | Rivers in northern region of Turkey | [ |
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| 19.5 % (23/118); | Preliminary study, Guangzhou, China | [ |
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| 100 % (58/58); | Stool samples of sporadic diarrheic patients, China, 2005–2006 | [ |
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| 93 % (2/43) | Adult patients with diarrhoea, Senegal | [ |
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| 85 contemporary multi-drug resistant D-Tartrate-Positive isolates; |
| [ |
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| 4.3 %; | Poultry samples, Japan | [ |
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| Two strains harboring Class 1 and 2 integrons; | Preliminary study, Guangzhou, China | [ |
| Class 3 integrons | |||
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| Australia | [ | |
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| Switzerland | [ |
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| Japan | [ |
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| The urine of an intensive care unit patient in Portugal | [ |
| Class 4 integrons | |||
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| Collection de I’Institut Pasteur (CIP) | [ | |
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