Abstract
A collection of non-typhoidal Salmonella strains, designated MMB1 to MMB18, resistant to third generation cephalosporins were isolated from water in a Tunisian hospital. Isolates harbored a new bla ACC gene located on a small transmissible plasmid of 5 kb. The ACC-1a4 enzyme was produced in Escherichia coli, purified and characterized. Compared to the chromosomal bla ACC-1a gene, the bla ACC-1a4 exhibit three mutations. We determined the kinetic parameters of our enzyme for a representative series of β-lactam substrates. The ACC-1a4 enzyme was active on penicillins and cephalosporins, nitrocefin and cephalothin being its best tested substrates. This is a real cause for alarm since these mutations showed that the DNA sequence of bla ACC is an intermediate between those of bla ACC-1a and bla ACC-4 and might increase the probability of the appearance and spreading of ACC-4-mediated resistance in the hospital environment. © Springer-Verlag and the University of Milan 2011.
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Aissa, M. B., Fernea, A. H., Bouraoui, H., Aissa, R. B., Mercuri, P. S., & Manai, M. (2012). Molecular characterization of plasmid-encoded ACC-1a4 β-lactamase produced by Salmonella strains isolated from water in a Tunisian hospital. Annals of Microbiology, 62(1), 31–36. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13213-011-0221-x
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