| Literature DB >> 30108557 |
Francesco Iannelli1, Francesco Santoro1, Maria Santagati2, Jean-Denis Docquier1, Elisa Lazzeri1, Gabiria Pastore1, Marco Cassone1, Marco R Oggioni1, Gian M Rossolini1, Stefania Stefani2, Gianni Pozzi1.
Abstract
The mef(A) gene was originally identified as the resistance determinant responsible for type M resistance to macrolides, a phenotype frequently found in clinical isolates of Streptococcus pneumoniae and Streptococcus pyogenes. MefA was defined as a secondary transporter of the major facilitator superfamily driven by proton-motive force. However, when characterizing the mef(A)-carrying elements Tn1207.1 and Φ1207.3, another macrolide resistance gene, msr(D), was found adjacent to mef(A). To define the respective contribution of mef(A) and msr(D) to macrolide resistance, three isogenic deletion mutants were constructed by transformation of a S. pneumoniae strain carrying Φ1207.3: (i) Δmef(A)-Δmsr(D); (ii) Δmef(A)-msr(D); and (iii) mef(A)-Δmsr(D). Susceptibility testing of mutants clearly showed that msr(D) is required for macrolide resistance, while deletion of mef(A) produced only a twofold reduction in the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) for erythromycin. The contribution of msr(D) to macrolide resistance was also studied in S. pyogenes, which is the original host of Φ1207.3. Two isogenic strains of S. pyogenes were constructed: (i) FR156, carrying Φ1207.3, and (ii) FR155, carrying Φ1207.3/Δmsr(D). FR155 was susceptible to erythromycin, whereas FR156 was resistant, with an MIC value of 8 μg/ml. Complementation experiments showed that reintroduction of the msr(D) gene could restore macrolide resistance in Δmsr(D) mutants. Radiolabeled erythromycin was retained by strains lacking msr(D), while msr(D)-carrying strains showed erythromycin efflux. Deletion of mef(A) did not affect erythromycin efflux. This data suggest that type M resistance to macrolides in streptococci is due to an efflux transport system of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) superfamily, in which mef(A) encodes the transmembrane channel, and msr(D) the two ATP-binding domains.Entities:
Keywords: ABC transporter; Streptococcus pneumoniae; Streptococcus pyogenes; macrolide efflux; mef(A); msr(D); prophage; Φ1207.3
Year: 2018 PMID: 30108557 PMCID: PMC6079230 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.01670
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Bacterial strains.
| Strain | Relevant propertiesa | Origin (references) |
|---|---|---|
| D39 | Type 2 Avery’s strain | |
| Rx1 | Unencapsulated derivative of D39 | |
| DP1004 | Unencapsulated derivative of D39; | |
| FP11 | Rx1 unencapsulated competence deficient derivative, Δ | |
| FR122 | FP11 derivative carrying Φ1207.3; NovR, CmR, EmR | This study |
| FR125 | Rx1 unencapsulated competence deficient derivative carrying Φ1207.3; Δ | Iannelli and Pozzi, unpublished results |
| FR183 | DP1004 derivative carrying Φ1207.3 (by transformation with FR125 chromosomal DNA); SmR, EmR | This study |
| FP39 | FR183 derivative, Δ | This study |
| FP40 | FR183 derivative, Δ | This study |
| FP59 | FR183 derivative, Δ | This study |
| FP92 | FP59 derivative, | This study |
| FR139 | FP11 derivative carrying Φ1207.3 – Δ | This study |
| D471 | Streptomycin-resistant serotype M6 strain from RU collection, SmR | |
| FR156 | D471 derivative carrying Φ1207.3 (by conjugation with FR122); SmR, EmR | This study |
| FR155 | D471 derivative carrying Φ1207.3 – Δ | This study |
| FR160 | FR155 derivative carrying Φ1207.3 (by conjugation with FR122); SmR, EmR, SpcR | This study |
Sensitivity to erythromycin.
| Strain | Genotype | MIC of erytromycin (μg/ml)a | Phenotype |
|---|---|---|---|
| FR183 | 8 | Resistant | |
| FP39 | Δ | 0.06 | Sensitive |
| FP40 | Δ | 4 | Resistant |
| FP59 | 0.12 | Sensitive | |
| DP1004b | – | 0.03 | Sensitive |
| FR156 | 8 | Resistant | |
| FR155 | 0.12 | Sensitive | |
| D471b | – | 0.03 | Sensitive |