| Literature DB >> 33028683 |
Willames M B S Martins1,2, Marisa F Nicolas3, Yang Yu1,4, Mei Li1, Priscila Dantas5, Kirsty Sands1, Edward Portal1, Luiz G P Almeida3, Ana Tereza R Vasconcelos3, Eduardo A Medeiros5, Mark A Toleman1, Timothy R Walsh1, Ana C Gales2, Diego O Andrey6,7.
Abstract
This study provides the genomic characterization and clinical description of bloodstream infections (BSI) cases due to ST15 KPC-2 producer Klebsiella pneumoniae Six KPC-K. pneumoniae isolates were recovered in 2015 in a tertiary Brazilian hospital and were analyzed by whole-genome sequencing (WGS) (Illumina MiSeq short reads). Of these, two isolates were further analyzed by Nanopore MinION sequencing, allowing complete chromosome and plasmid circularization (hybrid assembly), using Unicycler software. The clinical analysis showed that the 30-day overall mortality for these BSI cases was high (83%). The isolates exhibited meropenem resistance (MICs, 32 to 128 mg/liter), with 3/6 isolates resistant to polymyxin B. The conjugative properties of the bla KPC-2 plasmid and its copy number were assessed by standard conjugation experiments and sequence copy number analysis. We identified in all six isolates a small (8.3-kb), high-copy-number (20 copies/cell) non-self-conjugative IncQ plasmid harboring bla KPC-2 in a non-Tn4401 transposon. This plasmid backbone was previously reported to harbor bla KPC-2 only in Brazil, and it could be comobilized at a high frequency (10-4) into Escherichia coli J53 and into several high-risk K. pneumoniae clones (ST258, ST15, and ST101) by a common IncL/M helper plasmid, suggesting the potential of international spread. This study thus identified the international K. pneumoniae ST15 clone as a carrier of bla KPC-2 in a high-copy-number IncQ1 plasmid that is easily transmissible among other common Klebsiella strains. This finding is of concern since IncQ1 plasmids are efficient antimicrobial resistance determinant carriers across Gram-negative species. The spread of such carbapenemase-encoding IncQ1 plasmids should therefore be closely monitored.IMPORTANCE In many parts of the world, carbapenem resistance is a serious public health concern. In Brazil, carbapenem resistance in Enterobacterales is mostly driven by the dissemination of KPC-2-producing K. pneumoniae clones. Despite being endemic in this country, only a few reports providing both clinical and genomic data are available in Brazil, which limit the understanding of the real clinical impact caused by the dissemination of different clones carrying bla KPC-2 in Brazilian hospitals. Although several of these KPC-2-producer K. pneumoniae isolates belong to the clonal complex 258 and carry Tn4401 transposons located on large plasmids, a concomitant emergence and silent dissemination of small high-copy-number bla KPC-2 plasmids are of importance, as described in this study. Our data identify a small high-copy-number IncQ1 KPC plasmid, its clinical relevance, and the potential for conjugative transfer into several K. pneumoniae isolates, belonging to different international lineages, such as ST258, ST101, and ST15.Entities:
Keywords: Gram-negative bacteria; IncQ1; KPC-2; Klebsiella pneumoniae; ST15; bloodstream infections; carbapenemase; plasmid-mediated resistance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33028683 PMCID: PMC7568653 DOI: 10.1128/mSphere.00756-20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: mSphere ISSN: 2379-5042 Impact factor: 4.389
Clinical description of the six ST15 KPC-2-K. pneumoniae BSI cases
| Case | Bacterial | Patient | Underlying | Mo/yr of | Source of | Ward(s) during | Length of stay | Septic | Pitt | Empirical | 30-day | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | P35 | 45 (M) | Endocarditis | May 2015 | Lungs (VAP) | Cardiac surgery ICU | 38 | No | MD | PMB + | 2 | Died (18 days) |
| 2 | P02 | 81 (M) | Cholangitis | May 2015 | Abdominal | Emergency room ICU | 19 | Yes | 6 | 0 | Died (3 days) | |
| 3 | P45 | 69 (M) | Urosepsis | September | Urinary (indwelling | Emergency room | 1 | No | 2 | 1 | Survived | |
| 4 | P16 | 72 (M) | Acute abdomen | September | Abdominal | General ICU | 23 | Yes | 6 | 1 | Died (1 day) | |
| 5 | P51 | 48 (M) | Multiple myeloma | December | Lungs (VAP) | Internal medicine | 16 | Yes | 2 | 1 | Died (6 days) | |
| 6 | P49 | 76 (M) | Acute myocardial | December | CR-BSI | Cardiac surgery | 49 | No | 1 | 2 | Died (13 days) |
Abbreviations: M, male; F, female; CR-BSI, catheter-related bloodstream infection; PMB, polymyxin B; MEM, meropenem; ERT, ertapenem; AMK, amikacin; PTZ, piperacillin-tazobactam; CEF, cefepime; VAP, associated pneumonia; MD, missing data. Bold drug abbreviations indicate in vitro nonsusceptibility.
Number of days after bacteremia onset.
In case 3, ERT and MEM were individually tested resistant, and in vitro double synergy was not tested.
FIG 1Antimicrobial resistance phenotypes and genetic profile of the six epidemic strains (P02, P16, P35, P45, P49, and P51), two ST15 comparator strains (P21 and HSP32), and a transconjugant (P16-KPC-TC). Antimicrobial susceptibility and absence of genes are indicated by light beige cells. Diamonds indicate phenotypic resistance (EUCAST breakpoints) while orange, red, and purple indicate presence of resistance, replicon, and virulence genes in the isolates, respectively. Gray indicates not determined. Abbreviations: AMK, amikacin; GENTA, gentamicin; PMB, polymyxin B; FOSFO, fosfomycin; CAZ-AVI, ceftazidime-avibactam; MEM, meropenem; TIGE, tigecycline; KL, capsular type.
FIG 2(A) Genetic context of blaKPC-2 gene. (B) Circular map of pP35-KPC-IncQ1 plasmid. (C) Alignment of IncQ1 plasmids harboring blaKPC-2 or blaBKC-1: ST15 K. pneumoniae pP35-KPC-IncQ1 (accession number CP053039), Pseudomonas aeruginosa pCCBHI17348 (accession number NOKO01000029.1), K. quasipneumoniae pKQPS142b (accession number CP023480), BKC-1-K. pneumoniae pA60136 (accession number KP689347), and ST340 K. pneumoniae pKPN535a (accession number MH595533).
Mating-out assays using blaKPC-2 donors into several recipients
| Donor | Recipient | Recipient | Recipient | Recipient | Recipient | Transconjugant | Frequency | MEM MIC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P16 | J53 |
| 10 | Lab strain | P16-KPC-TC | 5 × 10−4 | 3 log2 dilutions | |
| P16-KPC-TC | P52 |
| 258 | Brazil | Human | P52-TC | 1.13 × 10−6 | 4 log2 dilutions |
| P16-KPC-TC | HSP65 |
| 101 | Brazil | Human | HSP65-TC | 3 × 10−6 | 3 log2 dilutions |
| P16-KPC-TC | HSP32 |
| 15 | Brazil | Human | HSP32-TC | 8.96 × 10−8 | 5 log2 dilutions |
| P16-KPC-TC | 78623 |
| 185 | Pakistan | Human | 78623-TC | 1.62 × 10−7 | 5 log2 dilutions |
| P16-KPC-TC | 45 |
| 43 (SLV) | India | Human | 45-TC | 3.5 × 10−7 | 9 log2 dilutions |
| P16-KPC-TC | 22 |
| 858 (SLV) | India | Human | |||
| P16-KPC-TC | 4W |
| 35 | UK | Human | 4W-TC | 3.94 × 10−8 | 4 log2 dilutions |
Abbreviations: ST, sequence type; SLV, single locus variant; MEM, meropenem; R, recipient; TC, transconjugant.
FIG 3Map of reporting class A carbapenemase-producing Klebsiella species isolates harboring carbapenemase genes on IncQ1 plasmids in Brazil. SP, Sao Paulo state; MG, Minas Gerais state; PE, Pernambuco state.