| Literature DB >> 28348846 |
Mark B Schultz1,2, Duy Pham Thanh3, Nhu Tran Do Hoan3, Ryan R Wick2,1, Danielle J Ingle2,1, Jane Hawkey2,1, David J Edwards2,1, Johanna J Kenyon4,5, Nguyen Phu Huong Lan3,6, James I Campbell3, Guy Thwaites3, Nguyen Thi Khanh Nhu3,6, Ruth M Hall4, Alexandre Fournier-Level7, Stephen Baker3,6, Kathryn E Holt2,1.
Abstract
We recently reported a dramatic increase in the prevalence of carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii infections in the intensive care unit (ICU) of a Vietnamese hospital. This upsurge was associated with a specific oxa23-positive clone that was identified by multilocus VNTR analysis. Here, we used whole-genome sequence analysis to dissect the emergence of carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii causing ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) in the ICU during 2009-2012. To provide historical context and distinguish microevolution from strain introduction, we compared these genomes with those of A. baumannii asymptomatic carriage and VAP isolates from this same ICU collected during 2003-2007. We identified diverse lineages co-circulating over many years. Carbapenem resistance was associated with the presence of oxa23, oxa40, oxa58 and ndm1 genes in multiple lineages. The majority of resistant isolates were oxa23-positive global clone GC2; fine-scale phylogenomic analysis revealed five distinct GC2 sublineages within the ICU that had evolved locally via independent chromosomal insertions of oxa23 transposons. The increase in infections caused by carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii was associated with transposon-mediated transmission of a carbapenemase gene, rather than clonal expansion or spread of a carbapenemase-harbouring plasmid. Additionally, we found evidence of homologous recombination creating diversity within the local GC2 population, including several events resulting in replacement of the capsule locus. We identified likely donors of the imported capsule locus sequences amongst the A. baumannii isolated on the same ward, suggesting that diversification was largely facilitated via reassortment and sharing of genetic material within the localized A. baumannii population.Entities:
Keywords: capsule switching; hospital acquired infection; imipenem resistance; local evolution; molecular epidemiology; phylogenomic analysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28348846 PMCID: PMC5320574 DOI: 10.1099/mgen.0.000050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Genom ISSN: 2057-5858
Fig. 1.Phylogenetic and temporal structure of the ICU A. baumannii isolates. (a) Unrooted ML core genome phylogeny for all sequenced isolates. Clonal lineages are coloured and labelled according to their sequence type (defined using the Pasteur MLST scheme). (b) Temporal distribution of sequenced isolates according to presence of acquired oxa23 or other carbapenemase genes; coloured by clone, as in (a). ‘Other’ includes carbapenemase genes oxa40, oxa58 and ndm1.
Fig. 2.Temporal changes in the MICs of imipenem. Each point represents a single isolate, coloured to indicate clonal group. Black points indicate the mean MIC for each year, joined by red lines to show trend.
The genetic environment of acquired carbapenemase genes
| Isolate or group | No. isolates | Imipenem MIC (μg ml− 1) | Gene | Mobile element | Depth ratio | Chromosomal insertions of carbapenemases | Plasmid location§ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Copies | Predicted site(s) | |||||||
| GC2 (A) | 1 | 64 | Tn | 0.7 | 1 | ABK1_1281 or ABK1_2910 | – | |
| GC2 (B) | 2 | 32 | Tn | 0.7–0.9 | 1 | ABK1_0148 | – | |
| 2 | 64 | Tn | 1.5–1.7 | 2 | ABK1_0148+ABK1_3166 | – | ||
| GC2 (C) | 9 | 64 | Tn | 1.5–1.8 | 2 | ABK1_3492 | – | |
| 7 | 64 | Tn | 2.4–2.7 | 3 | ABK1_3492 | |||
| GC2 (D) | 7 | 64 | Tn | 0.8–0.9 | 1 | ABK1_0857 or ABK1_2018 or ABK1_2567 | – | |
| GC2 (E) | 19 | 64 | Tn | 0.6–0.9 | 1 | ABK1_2948 or ABK1_2960 | – | |
| CC10 (KL8) | 3 | 64 | Tn | 0.9–1.1 | 1 | ABK1_3165 | – | |
| 1 | 64 | Tn | 1.9 | 2 | ABK1_3165 | – | ||
| BAL_329 (CC10) | 1 | 64 | Tn | 0.7 | 1 | ABK1_125 or ABK1_2164 or ABK1_2755 | – | |
| GC1 | 2 | 64 | Tn | 0.4–0.5 | – | – | a | |
| BAL_212 (ST52) | 1 | 64 | Tn | 1.09 | – | – | a | |
| BAL_103 | 1 | 0.5 | Tn | 0.07 | – | – | b | |
| UV 1268 (CC10) | 1 | 1.5 | IS | 0.38 | – | – | c | |
| BAL_283, BAL_287 (CC16) | 2 | 0.75–1.5 | IS | 0.5–0.8 | – | – | c | |
| BAL_255, 255_n (CC16) | 2 | 64 | IS | 0.5–0.6 | – | – | c | |
| Tn | 0.4–0.7 | 1 | ABK1_1257 | – | ||||
| BAL_205, BAL_322 | 2 | 64 | IS | 0.5–0.8 | – | – | d | |
| Tn | 0.4–0.7 | – | d | |||||
| BAL_204 | 1 | 24 | – | 2.7 | – | – | e | |
Ratio of mean read depths for the carbapenemase gene versus known chromosomal genes (see Fig. S2).
Carbapenemase gene copy number estimated from the depth ratio (see distributions in Fig. S1).
Possible insertion site(s) for the carbapenemase-carrying mobile element (details of ISAba1 sites are shown in Fig. S5).
Key: a, Aci6 type plasmid, ISAba1 site in AbaR4; b, possibly lost during culture cross-contamination (note low read depth); c, novel plasmid p255n_1 (deposited under GenBank accession number KT852971); d, possible novel plasmids; e, novel plasmid pBAL_204 (deposited under GenBank accession number KT946773).
Fig. 3.Genetic structure of the Tn2008-like transposon. Arrows indicate protein-coding genes, showing the direction of transcription and labelled with their assigned gene names. Genes are coloured to indicate function: blue, transposase; pink, carbapenemase; brown, other. Insertion sequences, which include transposase ORFs and flanking sequences, are shaded yellow. Flags indicate the presence of target site duplications (TSDs) that are formed upon transposition, which are labelled with the duplicated sequence. (a) Tn2008-like transposon of A. baumannii strain BAL_056 (Tn2008VAR, GenBank accession number KT852972, novel insertion sequence submitted to ISfinder as ISAba33, the asterisk indicates a SNP leading to amino acid substitution L125V). (b) Tn2008 transposon of A. baumannii strain 08325850 (GenBank accession number KP780408).
Fig. 4.Recombination-filtered core genome phylogeny for GC2 A. baumannii in the ICU. beast maximum clade credibility tree; shading indicates the period during which imipenem was used for the empirical treatment of VAP in the ICU. Isolate labels are coloured to indicate source: red, VAP; blue, asymptomatic carriage. Node bars indicate 95 % HPDs for divergence dates; node labels and branch line thickness indicate posterior support. The two main lineages (1 and 2) and five imipenem-resistant subclades (A–E) referred to in the text are labelled, arrows indicate inferred oxa23 carbapenemase acquisition events: red, Tn2006; orange, Tn2008VAR. Oxa23 gene copy number and MICs for imipenem are indicated on the right.
Fig. 5.Capsule variation in the GC2 A. baumannii. (a) Schematic representation of a recombination event affecting the KL in GC2; the extent of the capsule biosynthesis gene cluster is indicated by the black bar. Arrows indicate protein-coding genes showing the direction of transcription, with selected genes labelled; KL2 genes are coloured black, typical KL58 genes are coloured blue; GC2 KL58 is a hybrid of KL2 genes (black) and KL58 genes (blue). Grey shaded blocks indicate sequence homology, black overlaid lines indicate SNPs. (b) Dated GC2 phylogeny showing KL recombination dynamics. Branches are coloured by capsule type and labelled by horizontal transfer events affecting the KL; subclades A–E are labelled with red and yellow arrows indicating oxa23 transposon events (as in Fig. 4).
Fig. 6.Genetic structure of KLs identified in the GC2 A. baumannii isolates. Gene clusters are drawn to scale against KL2 reference GenBank accession number KJ459911. KL32, KL49 and KL58 have been deposited under GenBank accession numbers KT359615, KT359616 and KT359617, respectively. KL names are indicated on the left. Arrows indicate protein-coding genes, showing the direction of transcription and labelled with their assigned gene names; an asterisk indicates an internal frameshift. Genes are coloured by the predicted functional group of their gene product according to the legend. Grey shaded blocks indicate sequence homology.