Plasmids Shaped the Recent Emergence of the Major Nosocomial Pathogen Enterococcus faecium

Author:

Arredondo-Alonso S.1,Top J.1,McNally A.2,Puranen S.34,Pesonen M.34,Pensar J.4,Marttinen P.4,Braat J. C.1,Rogers M. R. C.1,van Schaik W.2,Kaski S.3,Willems R. J. L.1,Corander J.456,Schürch A. C.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Microbiology, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands

2. Institute of Microbiology and Infection, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom

3. Department of Computer Science, Aalto University, Espoo, Finland

4. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Helsinki Institute of Information Technology (HIIT), University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

5. Pathogen Genomics, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom

6. Department of Biostatistics, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

Abstract

Enterococcus faecium is one of the most frequent nosocomial pathogens of hospital-acquired infections. E. faecium has gained resistance against most commonly available antibiotics, most notably, against ampicillin, gentamicin, and vancomycin, which renders infections difficult to treat. Many antibiotic resistance traits, in particular, vancomycin resistance, can be encoded in autonomous and extrachromosomal elements called plasmids. These sequences can be disseminated to other isolates by horizontal gene transfer and confer novel mechanisms to source specificity. In our study, we elucidated the total plasmid content, referred to as the plasmidome, of 1,644 E. faecium isolates by using short- and long-read whole-genome technologies with the combination of a machine-learning classifier. This was fundamental to investigate the full collection of plasmid sequences present in our collection (pan-plasmidome) and to observe the potential transfer of plasmid sequences between E. faecium hosts. We observed that E. faecium isolates from hospitalized patients carried a larger number of plasmid sequences compared to that from other sources, and they elucidated different configurations of plasmidome populations in the hospital environment. We assessed the contribution of different genomic components and observed that plasmid sequences have the highest contribution to source specificity. Our study suggests that E. faecium plasmids are regulated by complex ecological constraints rather than physical interaction between hosts.

Funder

European Research Council

Royal Society Wolfson Resarch Merit Award

Academy of Finland

Joint Programming Initiative on Antimicrobial Resistance

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

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