4.5 Article

Epigenomics, genomics, resistome, mobilome, virulome and evolutionary phylogenomics of carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae clinical strains

Journal

MICROBIAL GENOMICS
Volume 6, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGY SOC
DOI: 10.1099/mgen.0.000474

Keywords

bacteriophage; carbapenemase; DNA methylation; evolutionary epidemiology; resistance plasmids; restriction modification systems

Funding

  1. NHLS, NRF (National Research Foundation)
  2. University of Pretoria

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKP) remains a major clinical pathogen and public health threat with few therapeutic options. The mobilome, resistome, methylome, virulome and phylogeography of CRKP in South Africa and globally were characterized. CRKP collected in 2018 were subjected to antimicrobial susceptibility testing, screening by multiplex PCR, genotyping by repetitive element palindromic (REP)-PCR, plasmid size, number, incompatibility and mobility analyses, and PacBio's SMRT sequencing (n=6). There were 56 multidrug-resistant CRKP, having bla(OXA-48)-like and bla(NDM-1/7) carbapenemases on self-transmissible IncF, A/C, IncL/M and IncX(3) plasmids endowed with prophages, traT, resistance islands, and type I and II restriction modification systems (RMS). Plasmids and clades detected in this study were respectively related to globally established/disseminated plasmids clades/clones, evincing transboundary horizontal and vertical dissemination. Reduced susceptibility to colistin occurred in 23 strains. Common clones included ST307, ST607, ST17, ST39 and ST3559. IncFII k virulent plasmid replicon was present in 56 strains. Whole-genome sequencing of six strains revealed least 41 virulence genes, extensive ompK36 mutations, and four different K- and O-loci types: KL2, KL25, KL27, KL102, O1, O2, O4 and O5. Types I, II and III RMS, conferring m6A (GATC, GATGNNNNNNTTG, CAANNNNNNCATC motifs) and m4C (CCWGG) modifications on chromosomes and plasmids, were found. The nature of plasmid-mediated, clonal and multi-clonal dissemination of bla(OXA-48)-like and bla(NDM-1) mirrors epidemiological trends observed for closely related plasmids and sequence types internationally. Worryingly, the presence of both bla(OXA-48) and bla(NDM-1) in the same isolates was observed. Plasmid-mediated transmission of RMS, virulome and prophages influence bacterial evolution, epidemiology, pathogenicity and resistance, threatening infection treatment. The influence of RMS on antimicrobial and bacteriophage therapy needs urgent investigation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available