Affiliation:
1. School of Veterinary Science, University of Queensland, Gatton, Queensland, Australia
2. School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
3. Veterans Affairs Medical Center and University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
4. Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Pharmaceutical Biology and Microbiology, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Fluoroquinolone (FQ)-resistant extraintestinal pathogenic
Escherichia coli
(FQ
r
ExPEC) strains from phylogenetic group B2 are undergoing epidemic spread. Isolates belonging to phylogenetic group B2 are generally more virulent than other
E. coli
isolates; therefore, resistance to FQs among group B2 isolates is concerning. Although clonal expansion of sequence type 131 (ST131) is a major factor, the contribution of additional clonal groups has not been quantified. Group B2 FQ
r
ExPEC isolates from humans (
n
= 250) and dogs (
n
= 12) in Australia were screened for ST131, a recently recognized and rapidly emerging multidrug-resistant and virulent clonal group that is important in both human and companion animal medicine. Non-ST131 isolates underwent virulence genotyping, PCR-based O typing, partial multilocus sequence typing (MLST), pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), and FQ resistance mechanism analysis. Of 49 non-ST131 isolates (45 human, 4 canine), 49% (24 human, 2 canine) represented O-type O75 and exhibited conserved virulence genotypes (F10
papA
allele,
iha
,
fimH
,
sat
,
vat
,
fyuA
,
iutA
,
kpsM
II,
usp
,
ompT
,
malX
, K1/K5 capsule) and MLST allele profiles corresponding with clonal complex CC14. Two clusters, each containing canine and human isolates, were identified by PFGE (differentiated by K1 and K5 capsules). Australian FQ
r
O75 isolates exhibited commonality with an historical FQ-susceptible O75 urosepsis isolate (also CC14). The isolation from humans and dogs of highly similar FQ
r
derivatives of the classic O75:K1/K5 (CC14) ExPEC lineage suggests recent acquisition of FQ resistance and potential cross-host-species transfer. This lineage should be targeted with ST131 in future epidemiological investigations of FQ
r
ExPEC.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology