4.7 Article

Fluoroquinolone resistance in atypical pneumococci and oral streptococci:: Evidence of horizontal gene transfer of fluoroquinolone resistance determinants from Streptococcus pneumoniae

Journal

ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY
Volume 51, Issue 8, Pages 2690-2700

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AAC.00258-07

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Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust Funding Source: Medline

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Atypical strains, presumed to be pneumococcus, with ciprofloxacin MICs of >= 4.0 mu g/ml and unique sequence variations within the quinolone resistance-determining regions (QRDRs) of the gyrase and topoisomerase genes in comparison with the Streptococcus pneumoniae R6 strain, were examined. These strains were reidentified using phenotypic methods, including detection of optochin susceptibility, bile solubility, and agglutination by serotype-specific antisera, and genotypic methods, including detection of pneumolysin and autolysin genes by PCR, 16S rRNA sequencing, and multilocus sequence typing (MLST). The analysis based on concatenated sequences of the six MLST loci distinguished the atypical strains from pneumococci, and these strains clustered closely with S. mitis. However, all these strains and five of nine strains from the viridans streptococcal group possessed one to three gyrA, gyrB, parC, and parE genes whose QRDR sequences clustered with those of S. pneumoniae, providing evidence of horizontal transfer of the QRDRs of the gyrase and topoisomerase genes from pneumococci into viridans streptococei. These genes also conferred fluoroquinolone resistance to viridans streptococci. In addition, the fluoroquinolone resistance determinants of 32 well-characterized Streptococcus mitis and Streptococcus oralis strains from bacteremic patients were also compared. These strains have unique amino acid substitutions in GyrA and ParC that were distinguishable from those in fluoroquinolone-resistant pneumococci and the atypical isolates. Both recombinational events and de novo mutations play an important role in the development of fluoroquinolone resistance.

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