Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Virology and Microbiology
2. Bioinformatics Research Center, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Fluoroquinolone MICs are increased through the acquisition of chromosomal mutations in the genes encoding gyrase (
gyrA
and
gyrB
) and topoisomerase IV (
parC
and
parE
), increased levels of the multidrug efflux pump AcrAB, and the plasmid-borne genes
aac
(
6
′)-
Ib
-cr and the
qnr
variants in
Escherichia coli
. In the accompanying report, we found that ciprofloxacin, gatifloxacin, levofloxacin, and norfloxacin MICs for fluoroquinolone-resistant
E. coli
clinical isolates were very high and widely varied (L. Becnel Boyd, M. J. Maynard, S. K. Morgan-Linnell, L. B. Horton, R. Sucgang, R. J. Hamill, J. Rojo Jimenez, J. Versalovic, D. Steffen, and L. Zechiedrich, Antimicrob. Agents Chemother.
53:
229-234, 2009). Here, we sequenced
gyrA
,
gyrB
,
parC
, and
parE
; screened for
aac
(
6
′)-
Ib
-cr and
qnrA
; and quantified AcrA levels in
E. coli
isolates for which patient sex, age, location, and site of infection were known. We found that (i) all fluoroquinolone-resistant isolates had
gyrA
mutations; (ii) ∼85% of
gyrA
mutants also had
parC
mutations; (iii) the ciprofloxacin and norfloxacin MICs for isolates harboring
aac
(
6
′)-
Ib
-cr (∼23%) were significantly higher, but the gatifloxacin and levofloxacin MICs were not; (iv) no isolate had
qnrA
; and (v) ∼33% of the fluoroquinolone-resistant isolates had increased AcrA levels. Increased AcrA correlated with nonsusceptibility to the fluoroquinolones but did not correlate with nonsusceptibility to any other antimicrobial agents reported from hospital antibiograms. Known mechanisms accounted for the fluoroquinolone MICs of 50 to 70% of the isolates; the remaining included isolates for which the MICs were up to 1,500-fold higher than expected. Thus, additional, unknown fluoroquinolone resistance mechanisms must be present in some clinical isolates.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology