Antimicrobial resistance determinants are associated with Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia and adaptation to the hospital environment: a bacterial genome-wide association study

Author:

Young Bernadette CORCID,Wu Chieh-HsiORCID,Charlesworth JaneORCID,Earle SarahORCID,Price James RORCID,Gordon N ClaireORCID,Cole Kevin,Dunn Laura,Liu Elian,Oakley Sarah,Godwin Heather,Fung Rowena,Miller Ruth,Knox Kyle,Votintseva Antonia,Quan T Phuong,Tilley Robert,Scarborough MatthewORCID,Crook Derrick WORCID,Peto Timothy EORCID,Walker A Sarah,Llewelyn Martin JORCID,Wilson Daniel JORCID

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundStaphylococcus aureus is a major bacterial pathogen in humans, and a dominant cause of severe bloodstream infections. Globally, antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in S. aureus remains challenging. While human risk factors for infection have been defined, contradictory evidence exists for the role of bacterial genomic variation in S. aureus disease.MethodsTo investigate the contribution of bacterial lineage and genomic variation to the development of bloodstream infection, we undertook a genome-wide association study comparing bacteria from 1017 individuals with bacteraemia to 984 adults with asymptomatic S. aureus nasal carriage. Within 984 carriage isolates, we also compared healthcare-associated (HA) carriage with community-associated (CA) carriage.ResultsAll major global lineages were represented in both bacteraemia and carriage, with no evidence for different attack rates. However, kmers tagging trimethoprim resistance-conferring mutation F99Y in dfrB were significantly associated with bacteraemia-vs-carriage (p=10−8.9-10−9.3). Pooling variation within genes, bacteraemia-vs-carriage was associated with the presence of mecA (HMP=10−5.3) as well as the presence of SCCmec (HMP=10−4.4).Among S. aureus carriers, no lineages were associated with HA-vs-CA carriage. However, we found a novel signal of HA-vs-CA carriage in the foldase protein prsA, where kmers representing conserved sequence allele were associated with CA carriage (p=10−7.1-10−19.4), while in gyrA, a ciprofloxacin resistance-conferring mutation, L84S, was associated with HA carriage (p=10−7.2).ConclusionsIn an extensive study of S. aureus bacteraemia and nasal carriage in the UK, we found strong evidence that all S. aureus lineages are equally capable of causing bloodstream infection, and of being carried in the healthcare environment.Genomic variation in the foldase protein prsA is a novel genomic marker of healthcare origin in S. aureus but was not associated with bacteraemia. AMR determinants were associated with both bacteraemia and hospital-associated carriage, suggesting that AMR increases the propensity not only to survive in hospital environments, but also to cause invasive disease.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference84 articles.

1. Staphylococcus aureus Infections: Epidemiology, Pathophysiology, Clinical Manifestations, and Management

2. Bloodstream Infections in Community Hospitals in the 21st Century: A Multicenter Cohort Study

3. Annual Epidemiological Commentary: Gram-negative bacteraemia, MRSA bacteraemia, MSSA bacteraemia and C. difficile infections, up to and including financial year April 2019 to March 2020 Public Health England 2020 [online].

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