4.7 Article

Contribution of outer membrane protein K36 to antimicrobial resistance and virulence in Klebsiella pneumoniae

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANTIMICROBIAL CHEMOTHERAPY
Volume 65, Issue 5, Pages 986-990

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jac/dkq056

Keywords

K; pneumoniae; OmpK36; neutrophil phagocytosis

Funding

  1. Taipei Veterans General Hospital, National Science Council
  2. National Health Research Institutes, Taiwan

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Loss of outer membrane protein (Omp) is commonly encountered in multidrug-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae. However, little is known about the association between Omp loss and virulence. In the present study, this association was investigated in K. pneumoniae. An OmpK36-deficient mutant (delta OmpK36) was derived from a virulent clinical isolate by targeted gene insertion. Antimicrobial susceptibility was tested by microbroth dilution and disc diffusion. Virulence was assessed by serum resistance, phagocytosis, clearance of viable bacteria in the liver and lethality in mice following inoculation with bacteria. Susceptibility tests showed that delta OmpK36 contributed to the resistance to cefazolin and cefoxitin but not to resistance to late-generation cephalosporins. In vitro assays demonstrated that loss of OmpK36 decreased the resistance to neutrophil phagocytosis and increased the resistance to serum killing during the first hour of the assay, but did not influence the growth rate when compared with the parental strain. Intraperitoneal injection of similar doses (similar to 4 x 10(4) cfu) of the parental strain and delta OmpK36 led to significantly fewer viable bacteria in the liver 24 h post-inoculation in delta OmpK36-inoculated mice. In the mice LD(50) (the bacterial dose that caused 50% death) assay, the parental strain was similar to 100-fold more lethal (similar to 10(3) cfu) than the delta OmpK36 mutant (similar to 10(5) cfu). Loss of OmpK36 in K. pneumoniae resulted in increased antimicrobial resistance, increased susceptibility to neutrophil phagocytosis, increased resistance to serum killing and reduced virulence.

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