Journal of medical microbiology | 2021

Co-infections of two carbapenemase-producing Enterobacter hormaechei clinical strains isolated from the same diabetes individual in China.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Introduction. Since mcr-1 was first reported in China, there have been ten variants of MCR appearing nationwide so far. Multidrug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae bacteria carrying both NDM and MCR have become a serious threat to global public health.Hypothesis/Gap Statement. The genetic structure of mcr-9 needs to be better understood in order to better prevent and control the transmission of drug-resistant genes.Aims. The aim of this study was to characterize the presence of two Enterobacter hormaechei isolates, which carries bla NDM-5 CME2 and the coexistence of mcr-9 and bla NDM-1 strain CMD2, which were isolated from a patient with diabetes in Sichuan, China.Methodology. The microbroth dilution method was used for antibiotic susceptibility. Conjugation experiment was used to investigate the transferability of bla NDM-1, bla NDM-5 and mcr-9. Whole-genome sequencing was performed on Illumina HiSeq platform. The ability of biofilm formation was detected by crystal-violet staining, the virulence of the bacteria was measured by Galleria mellonella killing assay.Results. bla NDM-5 carrier CME2 and CMD2 with bla NDM-1 and mcr-9 were resistant to carbapenems, β-lactam, aminoglycoside, quinolone and tetracycline, while CMD2 was also resistant to colistin. Conjugation assay and plasmid replicon typing further demonstrated that both bla NDM-1 and bla NDM-5 were respectively present on the self-transferrable IncX3 plasmid, mcr-9 was located on the self-transferrable IncHI2 plasmid. Through the analysis of mcr-9 gene context, the structure was DUF4942-rcnR-rcnA-copS-IS903-mcr-9-wbuC-qseC-qseB-IS1R-ΔsilR-IS903, bla NDM-1 context was IS3000-ΔISAba125-IS5-bla NDM-1-ble-trpF-groS-groL-insE-ΔIS26 structure, bla NDM-5 structure was IS3000-bla NDM-5-ble-trpF-dsbC-ΔIS26-umuD-ISKox3-tnpR-parA. Biofilm formation of CME2 was stronger than CMD2. There was no significant difference in virulence between the two strains.Conclusion. This study reveals two multiple drug-resistant E. hormaechei isolates from diabetes patient samples. E. hormaechei carrying two NDM-resistant genes is already a serious threat, where MCR is an important cause of treatment failure in bacterial infections. This study is a reminder not only to prevent infection in patients with diabetes, but also to constantly monitor the epidemic and spread of the drug-resistant gene.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1099/jmm.0.001316
Language English
Journal Journal of medical microbiology

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