The evolutionary mechanism of non-carbapenemase carbapenem-resistant phenotypes in Klebsiella spp

Author:

Rosas Natalia C12ORCID,Wilksch Jonathan12,Barber Jake13ORCID,Li Jiahui124,Wang Yanan1235,Sun Zhewei6,Rocker Andrea2,Webb Chaille T12,Perlaza-Jiménez Laura12,Stubenrauch Christopher J12ORCID,Dhanasekaran Vijaykrishna17ORCID,Song Jiangning14,Taiaroa George8,Davies Mark8,Strugnell Richard A8,Bao Qiyu6,Zhou Tieli4,McDonald Michael J13ORCID,Lithgow Trevor12

Affiliation:

1. Centre to Impact AMR, Monash University

2. Infection Program, Biomedicine Discovery Institute and Department of Microbiology, Monash University

3. School of Biological Sciences, Monash University

4. The First Affiliated Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University

5. Infection Program, Biomedicine Discovery Institute and Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, Monash University

6. Wenzhou Medical University

7. School of Public Health, LKS Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong

8. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, The Peter Doherty Institute, The University of Melbourne

Abstract

Antibiotic resistance is driven by selection, but the degree to which a bacterial strain’s evolutionary history shapes the mechanism and strength of resistance remains an open question. Here, we reconstruct the genetic and evolutionary mechanisms of carbapenem resistance in a clinical isolate of Klebsiella quasipneumoniae. A combination of short- and long-read sequencing, machine learning, and genetic and enzymatic analyses established that this carbapenem-resistant strain carries no carbapenemase-encoding genes. Genetic reconstruction of the resistance phenotype confirmed that two distinct genetic loci are necessary in order for the strain to acquire carbapenem resistance. Experimental evolution of the carbapenem-resistant strains in growth conditions without the antibiotic revealed that both loci confer a significant cost and are readily lost by de novo mutations resulting in the rapid evolution of a carbapenem-sensitive phenotype. To explain how carbapenem resistance evolves via multiple, low-fitness single-locus intermediates, we hypothesised that one of these loci had previously conferred adaptation to another antibiotic. Fitness assays in a range of drug concentrations show how selection in the antibiotic ceftazidime can select for one gene (blaDHA-1) potentiating the evolution of carbapenem resistance by a single mutation in a second gene (ompK36). These results show how a patient’s treatment history might shape the evolution of antibiotic resistance and could explain the genetic basis of carbapenem-resistance found in many enteric-pathogens.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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