Affiliation:
1. Division of Tuberculosis Elimination, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30333
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Ethambutol resistance in clinical
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
isolates is associated primarily with missense mutations in the
embB
gene. However, recent reports have described the presence of
embB
mutations, especially those at
embB
codon 306, in isolates susceptible to ethambutol. To clarify the role of
embB
mutations in ethambutol resistance, we sequenced the ethambutol resistance-determining region in spontaneous ethambutol-resistant mutants. In our study, 66% of spontaneous mutants contained a single point mutation in
embB
, with 55% of these occurring at
embB
306. The MIC of ethambutol for spontaneous mutants was increased two- to eightfold relative to the pansusceptible
M. tuberculosis
strains from which the mutants were generated. To further characterize the role of
embB
306 mutations, we directly introduced mutant alleles,
embB
(
M306V
) or
embB
(
M306I
), into pansusceptible
M. tuberculosis
strains and conversely reverted mutant alleles in spontaneous ethambutol-resistant mutants back to those of the wild type via allelic exchange using specialized linkage transduction. We determined that the MIC of ethambutol was reduced fourfold for three of the four spontaneous ethambutol-resistant
embB
306 mutants when the mutant allele was replaced with the wild-type
embB
allele. The MIC for one of the spontaneous mutants genetically reverted to wild-type
embB
was reduced by only twofold. When the wild-type
embB
allele was converted to the mutant allele
embB
(
M306V
), the ethambutol MIC was increased fourfold, and when the allele was changed to M306I, the ethambutol MIC increased twofold. Our data indicate that
embB
306 mutations are sufficient to confer ethambutol resistance, and detection of these mutations should be considered in the development of rapid molecular tests.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
70 articles.
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