Characterization of a P1-bacteriophage-like plasmid (phage-plasmid) harbouring bla CTX-M-15 in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi

Author:

Greig David R.123ORCID,Bird Matthew T.41ORCID,Chattaway Marie Anne1ORCID,Langridge Gemma C.5ORCID,Waters Emma V.5ORCID,Ribeca Paolo61ORCID,Jenkins Claire31ORCID,Nair Satheesh1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Infection Service, UK Health Security Agency, London NW9 5EQ, UK

2. Division of Infection and Immunity, Roslin Institute and Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh, Easter Bush EH25 9RG, UK

3. NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Gastrointestinal Pathogens, Liverpool, UK

4. NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Healthcare Associated Infections and Antimicrobial Resistance, Oxford, UK

5. Quadram Institute Bioscience, Norwich Research Park, Norwich, UK

6. NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Genomics and Enabling Data, Warwick, UK

Abstract

Antimicrobial-resistance (AMR) genes can be transferred between microbial cells via horizontal gene transfer (HGT), which involves mobile and integrative elements such as plasmids, bacteriophages, transposons, integrons and pathogenicity islands. Bacteriophages are found in abundance in the microbial world, but their role in virulence and AMR has not fully been elucidated in the Enterobacterales . With short-read sequencing paving the way to systematic high-throughput AMR gene detection, long-read sequencing technologies now enable us to establish how such genes are structurally connected into meaningful genomic units, raising questions about how they might cooperate to achieve their biological function. Here, we describe a novel ~98 kbp circular P1-bacteriophage-like plasmid termed ph681355 isolated from a clinical Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi isolate. It carries bla CTX-M-15, an IncY plasmid replicon (repY gene) and the ISEcP1 mobile element and is, to our knowledge, the first reported P1-bacteriophage-like plasmid (phage-plasmid) in S . enterica Typhi. We compared ph681355 to two previously described phage-plasmids, pSJ46 from S . enterica serovar Indiana and pMCR-1-P3 from Escherichia coli , and found high nucleotide similarity across the backbone. However, we saw low ph681355 backbone similarity to plasmid p60006 associated with the extensively drug-resistant S . enterica Typhi outbreak isolate in Pakistan, providing evidence of an alternative route for bla CTX-M-15 transmission. Our discovery highlights the importance of utilizing long-read sequencing in interrogating bacterial genomic architecture to fully understand AMR mechanisms and their clinical relevance. It also raises questions regarding how widespread bacteriophage-mediated HGT might be, suggesting that the resulting genomic plasticity might be higher than previously thought.

Funder

National Institute for Health Research Health Protection Research Unit

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

General Medicine

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