Abstract
We investigated the epidemiology and resistance mechanisms of ampicillin-sulbactam-nonsusceptible Escherichia coli, focusing on the role of the TEM-1 -lactamase. We collected all nonduplicate E. coli clinical isolates at 10 Japanese hospitals during December 2014 and examined their antimicrobial susceptibility, -lactamases, TEM-1 transferability, TEM-1 -lactamase activity, outer membrane protein profile, membrane permeability, and clonal genotypes. Among the 329 isolates collected, 95 were ampicillin-sulbactam nonsusceptible. Of these ampicillin-sulbactam-nonsusceptible isolates, -lactamases conferring resistance to sulbactam, such as AmpC, were present in 33%. Hyperproduction of sulbactam-susceptible -lactamases, TEMs with a strong promoter, were rare (5%). The remaining 59 isolates (62%) had only sulbactam-susceptible -lactamases, including TEM-1 with a wild-type promoter (n 28), CTX-Ms (n 13), or both (n 17). All 45 transconjugants from 96 donors with TEM-1 had higher ampicillin-sulbactam MICs (4 to 96 mg/ liter) than the recipient (2 mg/liter). In donors with only TEM-1, TEM-1 activity correlated with the 50% inhibitory concentration of sulbactam and ampicillin-sulbactam MICs. The decreased membrane permeation of sulbactam was associated with an increased ampicillin-sulbactam MIC. The reduced permeation was partly attributable to deficient outer membrane proteins, which were observed in 57% of the ampicillin-sulbactam-nonsusceptible isolates with only TEM-1 and a wild-type promoter. Sequence type 131 (ST131) was the most common clonal type (52%). TEM-1 with a wild-type promoter primarily contributed to ampicillin-sulbactam nonsusceptibility in E. coli, with the partial support of other mechanisms, such as reduced permeation. Conjugative TEM-1 and the clonal spread of ST131 may contribute to the prevalence of Japanese ampicillin-sulbactam-nonsusceptible isolates.
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Noguchi, T., Matsumura, Y., Kanahashi, T., Tanaka, M., Tsuchido, Y., Matsumura, T., … Ichiyama, S. (2019). Role of TEM-1 -Lactamase in the Predominance of Ampicillin-Sulbactam-Nonsusceptible Escherichia coli in Japan. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 63(2). https://doi.org/10.1128/AAC.02366-18
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