Reversible vancomycin susceptibility within emerging ST1421 Enterococcus faecium strains is associated with rearranged vanA-gene clusters and increased vanA plasmid copy number
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/29869Dato
2023-05-13Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Wagner, Theresa; Janice, Jessin; Schluz, Marc; Ballard, Susan; da Silva, Anders; Coombs, Geoffrey W; Daley, Denise; Pang, Stanley; Mowlaboccus, Shakeel; Stinear, Tim; Hegstad, Kristin; Howden, Benjamin P; Sundsfjord, ArnfinnSammendrag
Vancomycin variable enterococci (VVE) are van-positive enterococci with a vancomycin-susceptible phenotype (VVE-S) that can convert to a resistant phenotype (VVE-R) and be selected for during vancomycin
exposure. VVE-R outbreaks have been reported in Canada and Scandinavian countries. The aim of this
study was to examine the presence of VVE in whole genome sequenced (WGS) Australian bacteremia
Enterococcus faecium (Efm) isolates collected through the Australian Group on Antimicrobial resistance
(AGAR) network. Eight potential VVEAus isolates, all identified as Efm ST1421, were selected based on the
presence of vanA and a vancomycin-susceptible phenotype. During vancomycin selection, two potential
VVE-S harboring intact vanHAX genes, but lacking the prototypic vanRS and vanZ genes, reverted to a
resistant phenotype (VVEAus-R). Spontaneous VVEAus-R reversion occurred at a frequency of 4-6 × 10−8
resistant colonies per parent cell in vitro after 48 h and led to high-level vancomycin and teicoplanin
resistance. The S to R reversion was associated with a 44-bp deletion in the vanHAX promoter region
and an increased vanA plasmid copy number. The deletion in the vanHAX promoter region enables an
alternative constitutive promoter for the expression of vanHAX. Acquisition of vancomycin resistance was
associated with a low fitness cost compared with the corresponding VVEAus-S isolate. The relative proportion of VVEAus-R vs. VVEAus-S decreased over time in serial passages without vancomycin selection.
Efm ST1421 is one of the predominant VanA-Efm multilocus sequence types found across most regions of
Australia, and has also been associated with a major prolonged VVE outbreak in Danish hospitals.
Forlag
ElsevierSitering
Wagner T, Janice JJ, Schluz, Ballard, da Silva, Coombs GW, Daley D, Pang S, Mowlaboccus, Stinear T, Hegstad K, Howden BP, Sundsfjord A. Reversible vancomycin susceptibility within emerging ST1421 Enterococcus faecium strains is associated with rearranged vanA-gene clusters and increased vanA plasmid copy number. International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents. 2023Metadata
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