| Literature DB >> 32979461 |
Carol H Pong1, Robert A Moran1, Ruth M Hall2.
Abstract
A large plasmid, pCERC14, found in an antibiotic resistant commensal Escherichia coli isolate recovered from a healthy adult was sequenced. pCERC14 was 162,926 bp and carried FII-18 and FIB-1 replicons and an F-like transfer region as well as several virulence determinants, some of which are involved in the uptake of iron which would be advantageous for the commensal lifestyle. The plasmid backbone is interrupted in 11 places by complete IS (IS1 (4 copies), IS2 (2), IS629 (2) and single IS100, IS186, ISEc33) and in three places by partial IS copies. The antibiotic resistance genes were found in two IS26-bounded pseudo-compound transposons (PCT). One contained a remnant of a class 1 integron that includes a dfrA5 gene cassette and the sul1 gene conferring resistance to trimethoprim and sulphonamides, respectively. The second, named PTntet(C)-var, contained a 4828 bp DNA segment that includes the tet(C) tetracycline resistance determinant. As tet(C) is relatively rare in E. coli and other Gram-negative bacterial isolates, the structure and evolution of tet(C)-containing PCT in available sequences was examined. The largest identified was PTntet(C), a close relative of PTntet(C)-var, and a potential progenitor for these PCT. Most PCT shared one internal boundary with PTntet(C) but the length of the central tet(C)-containing segment was shorter due to IS26-mediated deletions. The most abundant variant form, previously named Tn6309, was widely distributed and, in a derivative of it, most of the tetA(C) gene has been replaced by the tetA(A) gene presumably by homologous recombination.Entities:
Keywords: -et(C) determinant; ColM plasmid; Commensal Escherichia coli; FII:FIB plasmid; IS26-mediated deletion; PCT evolution; Pseudo-compound transposon (PCT); Tetracycline resistance
Year: 2020 PMID: 32979461 DOI: 10.1016/j.plasmid.2020.102541
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plasmid ISSN: 0147-619X Impact factor: 3.466