Affiliation:
1. Antimicrobial Research Centre and Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom
2. National Centre for Antimicrobials and Infection Control, Statens Serum Insititut, Copenhagen, Denmark
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The prevalence of resistance to fusidic acid in clinical isolates of
Staphylococcus aureus
, including methicillin-resistant
S. aureus
(MRSA), has increased in the past 2 decades. However, there are limited data regarding the relative importance in this process of the different staphylococcal determinants that mediate resistance to fusidic acid. Furthermore, the roles played by clonal dissemination of fusidic acid-resistant strains versus horizontal transmission of fusidic acid resistance determinants have not been investigated in detail. To gain insight into both issues, we examined fusidic acid resistance in 1,639 MRSA isolates collected in Denmark between 2003 and 2005. Resistance to fusidic acid (MIC, >1 μg/ml) was exhibited by 291 (17.6%) isolates. For the majority of these isolates (∼87%), resistance was attributed to carriage of
fusB
or
fusC
, while the remainder harbored mutations in the gene (
fusA
) encoding the drug target (EF-G). The CC80-MRSA-IV clone carrying
fusB
accounted for ∼61% of the resistant isolates in this collection, while a single CC5 clone harboring
fusC
represented ∼12% of the resistant strains. These findings emphasize the importance of clonal dissemination of fusidic acid resistance within European MRSA strains. Nonetheless, the distribution of
fusB
and
fusC
across several genetic lineages, and their presence on multiple genetic elements, indicates that horizontal transmission of fusidic acid resistance genes has also played an important role in the increasing prevalence of fusidic acid resistance in MRSA.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
41 articles.
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