Affiliation:
1. Division
of AIDS, STD, and TB Laboratory Research, National Center for HIV, STD
and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
Atlanta, Georgia 30333
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Ethionamide
(ETH) is a structural analog of the antituberculosis drug isoniazid
(INH). Both of these drugs target InhA, an enzyme involved in mycolic
acid biosynthesis. INH requires catalase-peroxidase (KatG) activation,
and mutations in
katG
are a major INH resistance mechanism.
Recently an enzyme (EthA) capable of activating ETH has been
identified. We sequenced the entire
ethA
structural gene of 41
ETH-resistant
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
isolates. We also
sequenced two regions of
inhA
and all or part of
katG.
The MICs of ETH and INH were determined in order to
associate the mutations identified with a resistance phenotype. Fifteen
isolates were found to possess
ethA
mutations, for all of
which the ETH MICs were ≥50 μg/ml. The
ethA
mutations were all different, previously unreported, and distributed
throughout the gene. In eight of the isolates, a missense mutation in
the
inhA
structural gene occurred. The ETH MICs for seven of
the InhA mutants were ≥100 μg/ml, and these isolates
were also resistant to ≥8 μg of INH per ml. Only a
single point mutation in the
inhA
promoter was identified in
14 isolates. A
katG
mutation occurred in 15 isolates, for
which the INH MICs for all but 1 were ≥32 μg/ml. As
expected, we found no association between
katG
mutation and
the level of ETH resistance. Mutations within the
ethA
and
inhA
structural genes were associated with relatively high
levels of ETH resistance. Approximately 76% of isolates
resistant to ≥50 μg of ETH per ml had such
mutations.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
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