Affiliation:
1. Prince Leopold Institute of Tropical Medicine, Mycobacteriology Unit, Nationalestraat 155, Antwerp B-2000, Belgium
2. National Center for TB and Lung Diseases, National Reference Laboratory, 50, Maruashvili Street, Tbilisi 0101, Georgia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The aminoglycosides kanamycin and amikacin and the macrocyclic peptide capreomycin are key drugs for the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). The increasing rates of resistance to these drugs and the possible cross-resistance between them are concerns for MDR-TB therapy. Mutations in the 16S rRNA gene (
rrs
) have been associated with resistance to each of the drugs, and mutations of the
tlyA
gene, which encodes a putative rRNA methyltransferase, are thought to confer capreomycin resistance in
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
bacteria. Studies of possible cross-resistance have shown variable results. In this study, the MICs of these drugs for 145 clinical isolates from Georgia and the sequences of the
rrs
and
tlyA
genes of the isolates were determined. Of 78 kanamycin-resistant strains, 9 (11.5%) were susceptible to amikacin and 16 (20.5%) were susceptible to capreomycin. Four strains were resistant to capreomycin but were susceptible to the other drugs, whereas all amikacin-resistant isolates were resistant to kanamycin. Sequencing revealed six types of mutations in the
rrs
gene (A514C, C517T, A1401G, C1402T, C1443G, T1521C) but no mutations in the
tlyA
gene. The A514C, C517T, C1443G, and T1521C mutations showed no association with resistance to any of the drugs. The A1401G and C1402T mutations were observed in 65 kanamycin-resistant isolates and the 4 capreomycin-resistant isolates, respectively, whereas none of the susceptible isolates showed either of those mutations. The four mutants with the C1402T mutations showed high levels of resistance to capreomycin but no resistance to kanamycin and amikacin. Detection of the A1401G mutation appeared to be 100% specific for the detection of resistance to kanamycin and amikacin, while the sensitivities reached 85.9% and 94.2%, respectively.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
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