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Linezolid-resistant (Tn6246::fexB-poxtA) Enterococcus faecium strains colonizing humans and bovines on different continents: similarity without epidemiological link
Author(s) -
Ana R. Freitas,
Ana P. Tedim,
Bárbara Duarte,
Houyem Elghaieb,
Mohamed Salah Abbassi,
Abdennaceur Hassen,
Antónia Read,
Valquíria Alves,
Carla Novais,
Luı́sa Peixe
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.124
H-Index - 194
eISSN - 1460-2091
pISSN - 0305-7453
DOI - 10.1093/jac/dkaa227
Subject(s) - enterococcus faecium , linezolid , tetracycline , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , enterococcus , plasmid , antibiotic resistance , pulsed field gel electrophoresis , erythromycin , antibiotics , staphylococcus aureus , vancomycin , genetics , gene , bacteria , genotype
Objectives poxtA is the most recently described gene conferring acquired resistance to linezolid, a relevant antibiotic for treating enterococcal infections. We retrospectively screened for poxtA in diverse enterococci and aimed to characterize its genetic/genomic contexts. Methods poxtA was screened by PCR in 812 enterococci from 458 samples (hospitals/healthy humans/wastewater/animals/retail food) obtained in Portugal/Angola/Tunisia (1996–2019). Antimicrobial susceptibility testing was performed for 13 antibiotics (EUCAST/CLSI). poxtA stability (∼500 generations), transfer (filter mating), clonality (SmaI-PFGE) and location (S1-PFGE/hybridization) were tested. WGS (Illumina-HiSeq) was performed for clonal representatives. Results poxtA was detected in Enterococcus faecium from six samples (1.3%): a healthy human (rectal swab) in Porto, Portugal (ST32/2001); four farm cows (milk) in Mateur, Tunisia (ST1058/2015); and a hospitalized patient (faeces) in Matosinhos, Portugal (ST1058/2015). All expressed resistance to linezolid (MIC = 8 mg/L), chloramphenicol, tetracycline and erythromycin, with variable resistance to ciprofloxacin and streptomycin. ST1058-poxtA-carrying isolates from Tunisia and Portugal differed by two SNPs and had similar plasmid content. poxtA, located in an IS1216-flanked Tn6246-like element, co-hybridized with fexB on one or more plasmids per isolate (one to three plasmids of 30–100 kb), was stable after several generations and transferred only from ST1058. ST1058 strains carried resistance/virulence genes (Efmqnr/acm) possibly induced under selective quinolone treatment. Conclusions poxtA has been circulating in Portugal since at least 2001, corresponding to the oldest description worldwide to date. We also extend the reservoir of poxtA to bovines. The similar linezolid-resistant poxtA-carrying strains colonizing humans and livestock on different continents, and without a noticeable relationship, suggests a recent transmission event or convergent evolution of E. faecium populations in different hosts and geographic regions.

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