Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Laboratory Sciences and Medical Biotechnology
2. Center for Optoelectronic Biomedicine
3. National Taiwan University College of Medicine and Department of Surgery, Division of Neurosurgery
4. Department of Laboratory Medicine
5. Department of Internal Medicine, National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A total of 71 fusidic acid-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus
(45 methicillin-resistant and 26 methicillin-susceptible) isolates were examined for the presence of resistance determinants. Among 45 fusidic acid-resistant methicillin-resistant
S. aureus
(MRSA), isolates, 38 (84%) had
fusA
mutations conferring high-level resistance to fusidic acid (the MIC was ≥128 μg/ml for 22/38), none had
fusB
, and 7 (16%) had
fusC
. For 26 fusidic acid-resistant methicillin-susceptible
S. aureus
(MSSA), only 3 possessed
fusA
mutations, but 15 (58%) had
fusB
and 8 (31%) had
fusC
. Low-level resistance to fusidic acid (MICs ≤ 32 μg/ml) was found in most
fusB
- or
fusC
-positive isolates. For 41 isolates (38 MRSA and 3 MSSA), with
fusA
mutations, a total of 21 amino acid substitutions in EF-G (
fusA
gene) were detected, of which R76C, E444K, E444V, C473S, P478S, and M651I were identified for the first time. The nucleotide sequencing of
fusB
and flanking regions in an MSSA isolate revealed the structure of partial IS
257
-
aj1
-LP-
fusB
-
aj2
-
aj3
-IS
257
-partial
blaZ
, which is identical to the corresponding region in pUB101, and the rest of
fusB
-carrying MSSA isolates also show similar structures. On the basis of
spa
and staphylococcal cassette chromosome
mec
element (SCC
mec
) typing, two major genotypes,
spa
type t037-SCC
mec
type III (t037-III; 28/45; 62%) and t002-II (13/45; 29%), were predominant among 45 MRSA isolates. By pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis, 45 MRSA isolates were divided into 12 clusters, while 26 MSSA isolates were divided into 15 clusters. Taken together, the distribution of fusidic acid resistance determinants (
fusA
mutations,
fusB
, and
fusC
) was quite different between MRSA and MSSA groups.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology