Affiliation:
1. Antibiotic Group, Department of Medical Microbiology, St. Bartholomew’s and the Royal London School of Medicine and Dentistry, London, E1 2AD, United Kingdom,1 and
2. Section of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, Hacettepe University School of Medicine, 06100 Ankara, Turkey2
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Two extended-spectrum mutants of the class D β-lactamase OXA-10 (PSE-2) from
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
isolates obtained in Ankara, Turkey, were described previously and were designated OXA-11 and -14.
P. aeruginosa
906 and 961, isolated at the same hospital, were highly resistant to ceftazidime (MIC ≥ 128 μg/ml) and produced a β-lactamase with a pI of 6.2. The MICs of ceftriaxone, cefoperazone, cefsulodin, and cefepime were 4- to 16-fold above the typical values for
P. aeruginosa
, whereas the MICs of penicillins and cefotaxime were raised only marginally. Ceftazidime MICs were not significantly reduced by clavulanate or tazobactam at 4 μg/ml. Ceftazidime resistance did not transfer conjugatively but was mobilized to
P. aeruginosa
PU21 by plasmid pUZ8. Both isolates gave similar DNA restriction patterns, suggesting that they were replicates; moreover, they yielded identically sized
Bam
HI fragments that hybridized with a
bla
OXA-10
probe. DNA sequencing revealed that both isolates had the same new β-lactamase, designated OXA-16, which differed from OXA-10 in having threonine instead of alanine at position 124 and aspartate instead of glycine at position 157. The latter change is also present in OXA-11 and -14 and seems critical to ceftazidime resistance. Kinetic parameters showed that OXA-16 enzyme was very active against penicillins, cephaloridine, cefotaxime, and ceftriaxone, but hydrolysis of ceftazidime was not detected despite the ability of the enzyme to confer resistance.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
63 articles.
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