4.5 Article

Mutations in two component system (PhoPQ and PmrAB) in colistin resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae from North Indian tertiary care hospital

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANTIBIOTICS
Volume 74, Issue 7, Pages 450-457

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41429-021-00417-2

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigated the molecular basis of colistin resistance in Klebsiella pneumoniae and its clonal transmission in a North Indian tertiary care hospital. Results indicated that colistin resistance was mainly attributed to mutations in PhoPQ and PmrAB TCS genes, with different sequence types sharing a common ancestor and showing clonal transmission patterns. These findings will contribute to the formulation of effective strategies for infection prevention and antimicrobial development.
Colistin resistance in Gram negative bacteria is mainly attributed to chromosomal mutations in Two Component Systems(TCS) PhoPQ and PmrAB and plasmid-borne genes(mcr and its variants). The aim of this study was to understand the molecular basis of colistin resistance in Klebsiella pneumoniae and determine clonal transmission, in a North Indian tertiary care hospital over a 2.5 year period. Antimicrobial susceptibility was determined by Vitek and colistin resistance was confirmed by broth microdilution. Carbapenemases(bla(KPC), bla(VIM), bla(IMP), bla(NDM), bla(OXA-48)) and mcr-1 screening was done by PCR. Mutations in chromosomal genes mgrB, phoP, phoQ, pmrA, pmrB were analysed. Sequence typing was performed by Multilocus sequence typing(MLST). OXA-48 was detected in thirteen isolates while three isolates co-expressed OXA-48 and NDM. The mcr-1 gene was absent in all 16 isolates. Deleterious mutations in mgrB included insertion sequences IS903 and ISkpn26 and a premature stop codon. A total of 18 point mutations were identified in PhoPQ and PmrAB TCS; of which, novel mutations were reported in phoQ (K46E, L322V, D152N, F373L, R249G), pmrB (P159R) and pmrA (D149L). Six different sequence types ST231, ST147, ST395, ST42, ST14 and ST101 were identified. Phylogenetic analysis showed that sequence types ST14, ST395 and ST147 are closely related to ST101 and all identified sequence types had a common ancestor ST231. Colistin resistance in K. pneumoniae was attributed to mutations in PhoPQ and PmrAB TCS, while location specific distribution of strains indicates clonal transmission. The results of this study will help in formulation of effective infection prevention and antimicrobial development strategies.

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