Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, City Hospital NHS Trust, Birmingham B18 7QH,1 and
2. Department of Infection, University of Birmingham Medical School, Birmingham B15 2TT,2 United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Twenty-three norfloxacin-selected first-step mutants of
Streptococcus pneumoniae
showed low-level fluoroquinolone resistance. Their susceptibility to norfloxacin in the presence or absence of reserpine and known efflux pump substrates was determined by an agar dilution method. Five mutants showed four- to eightfold increases in their susceptibility to norfloxacin in the presence of reserpine and four- to eightfold decreases in their susceptibility to acriflavine and ethidium bromide. This phenotype is suggestive of an efflux mechanism of resistance. A representative of these mutants, 1N27, accumulated significantly less ethidium bromide than the parent strain; reserpine abolished these differences. No changes in the quinolone resistance-determining regions of
parC
,
parE
,
gyrA
, or
gyrB
were found in this mutant. By our validated agar dilution method, the efflux phenotype was sought in clinical isolates of
S. pneumoniae
. Of 1,037 clinical isolates examined from the United Kingdom, 273 showed reduced susceptibility to norfloxacin or ciprofloxacin. Of these, 45.4% showed the efflux phenotype. Our findings suggest that an efflux mechanism may be a frequent cause of clinically significant fluoroquinolone resistance in pneumococci.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
196 articles.
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