Transferable Quinolone Resistance in Vibrio cholerae

Author:

Kim Hong Bin123,Wang Minghua34,Ahmed Sabeena5,Park Chi Hye3,LaRocque Regina C.3,Faruque Abu S. G.5,Salam Mohammed A.5,Khan Wasif A.5,Qadri Firdausi5,Calderwood Stephen B.3,Jacoby George A.6,Hooper David C.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam, Republic of Korea

2. Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea

3. Division of Infectious Diseases, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

4. Institute of Antibiotics, Huashan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai, China

5. International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Dhaka, Bangladesh

6. Lahey Clinic, Burlington, Massachusetts

Abstract

ABSTRACT Ciprofloxacin was introduced for treatment of patients with cholera in Bangladesh because of resistance to other agents, but its utility has been compromised by the decreasing ciprofloxacin susceptibility of Vibrio cholerae over time. We correlated levels of susceptibility and temporal patterns with the occurrence of mutation in gyrA , which encodes a subunit of DNA gyrase, followed by mutation in parC , which encodes a subunit of DNA topoisomerase IV. We found that ciprofloxacin activity was more recently further compromised in strains containing qnrVC3 , which encodes a pentapeptide repeat protein of the Qnr subfamily, members of which protect topoisomerases from quinolone action. We show that qnrVC3 confers transferable low-level quinolone resistance and is present within a member of the SXT integrating conjugative element family found commonly on the chromosomes of multidrug-resistant strains of V. cholerae and on the chromosomes of Escherichia coli transconjugants constructed in the laboratory. Thus, progressive increases in quinolone resistance in V. cholerae are linked to cumulative mutations in quinolone targets and most recently to a qnr gene on a mobile multidrug resistance element, resulting in further challenges for the antimicrobial therapy of cholera.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology

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