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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, September 1998, p. 2312-2318, Vol. 42, No. 9
0066-4804/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Detection of Tn917-Like Sequences within a
Tn916-like Conjugative Transposon (Tn3872) in
Erythromycin-Resistant Isolates of Streptococcus
pneumoniae
Linda K.
McDougal,1
Fred C.
Tenover,1,*
Linda N.
Lee,2
J. Kamile
Rasheed,1
Jan E.
Patterson,2
James H.
Jorgensen,3 and
Donald
J.
LeBlanc4
Hospital Infections Program, Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 303331;
Department of Medicine2 and
Department of Pathology,3 University of
Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas
78284; and
Department of Oral Biology, Indiana
University School of Dentistry, Indianapolis, Indiana
462024
Received 9 January 1998/Returned for modification 24 February
1998/Accepted 15 June 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
A series of macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B (MLS)-resistant
pneumococcal isolates of a variety of serotypes was examined and was
found to contain Tn917-like elements by DNA-DNA
hybridization. Like Tn1545, Tn917 also encodes
an ermAM gene but does not mediate resistance to other
antimicrobial agents. Furthermore, nucleotide sequence analyses of the
DNAs flanking three of the Tn917-like elements revealed
that they were inserted into orf9 of a
Tn916-like element in a composite transposon-like structure
(Tn3872). Other MLS-resistant strains appeared to contain
Tn1545-like elements that had suffered a deletion of
sequences including the aphA-3 sequences responsible for
kanamycin resistance. Thus, the MLS resistance phenotype in pneumococci
appears to be mediated by the ermAM present on a much wider
variety of genetic elements than was previously appreciated.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Erythromycin resistance in
Streptococcus pneumoniae has been ascribed in part to the
presence of ermAM, which encodes an rRNA methylase similar
to that encoded by ermB of staphylococci (65). Erythromycin MICs for pneumococci harboring ermAM are
typically
64 µg/ml. A second mechanism of erythromycin resistance
in pneumococci, an efflux pump encoded by mefE
(57), produces MICs in the range of 1 to 32 µg/ml. In some
pneumococci, ermAM has been shown to reside on
Tn1545, a 25.3-kb conjugative transposon that also encodes resistance to tetracycline via tet(M) and kanamycin via
aphA-3 (6, 13). Tn1545 belongs to a
larger class of transposons that includes Tn916, a
conjugative transposable element that is widely disseminated among a
variety of bacterial species (10, 52, 53).
Tn1545/Tn916-like elements have been described in a variety of gram-positive genera, including enterococci, streptococci, and staphylococci, as well as Bacteroides ureolyticus and
Ureaplasma urealyticum (8-10, 14, 18, 40, 47, 48,
52).
Recently, LeBlanc and colleagues (31) used DNA-DNA
hybridization to demonstrate that some erythromycin-resistant isolates of pneumococci contained Tn917-like sequences.
Tn917 is a 5.257-kb transposable element that contains the
ermAM gene but does not encode resistance to either
tetracycline or kanamycin (54, 59). This transposon is also
widely distributed in enterococci of human and animal origin (30,
49).
The goal of this study was to determine if a Tn917-like
element was present in erythromycin-resistant strains of pneumococci representing a number of well-documented clones. Our results suggest that Tn1545, deleted versions of Tn1545, and a
Tn917-like element that is part of a larger composite
transposon-like structure (Tn3872) are all responsible for
macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B (MLS)-type resistance in S. pneumoniae.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial strains.
Twelve strains of S. pneumoniae were obtained from the culture collection of the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and from the University of
Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. Isolates were selected on
the basis of their antimicrobial resistance profiles, serotypes, and
pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) patterns to represent a broad
array of clonal types. Pneumococcal isolate BM4200 (5),
containing the conjugative transposon Tn1545 (13), was kindly provided by P. Courvalin (Institut Pasteur, Paris, France). This isolate originally tested serotype 23F, but in our
hands it was nontypeable. Organisms were identified by standard methods
(15, 51), and serotypes were determined by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
Susceptibility testing.
The MICs of chloramphenicol,
clindamycin, erythromycin, penicillin, and tetracycline were determined
by the broth microdilution method with cation-adjusted Mueller-Hinton
broth (Difco Laboratories, Detroit, Mich.) containing 5% lysed horse
blood as described by National Committee for Clinical Laboratory
Standards document M7-A4 (41) and elsewhere (25).
Organisms were incubated for 18 to 20 h at 35°C in ambient air.
S. pneumoniae ATCC 49619 was used for quality control.
Resistance to kanamycin was presumed if the isolate grew on a sheep
blood agar plate in the presence of 500 µg of kanamycin per ml.
PFGE.
Genomic DNA was prepared in situ in agarose blocks as
described previously (37) and was digested with
SmaI (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, Md.). The fragments
were resolved by PFGE in 1% agarose (SeaKem GTG agarose; FMC
Bioproducts, Rockland, Maine) in 0.5× Tris-borate-EDTA buffer for
20 h at 14°C at 6 V/cm in a CHEF-DR II system (Bio-Rad
Laboratories, Hercules, Calif.). The parameters were an initial pulse
time of 1 s that was increased to 20 s.
Filter mating.
Overnight cultures of donor and recipient
cells were transferred into 10 ml of prewarmed Todd-Hewitt broth
containing 0.5% yeast extract and were grown for approximately 6 h to the late exponential phase (5 × 108 CFU/ml). The
cells were harvested by centrifugation and were concentrated 10-fold in
broth containing DNase I (50 µg/ml; Life Technologies) to give 5 × 109 CFU/ml. Donor and recipient cells were mixed in a
1:2 ratio, and 100 µl of the mating mixture was spread onto
0.22-µm-pore-size nitrocellulose membrane filters (Millipore Corp.,
Bedford, Mass.) that were placed on Mueller-Hinton agar plates with 5%
sheep blood and DNase I. After 20 h of incubation at 35°C, the
cells were washed from the filters in 500 µl of broth with DNase I,
and 100 µl was spread onto selective agar plates containing either 4 µg of tetracycline or erythromycin per ml and either 1 mg of
streptomycin per ml or 100 µg of rifampin per ml and 25 µg of
fusidic acid per ml. Pneumococcal isolate BM4200 served as the positive
control donor of Tn1545, and Enterococcus
faecalis CG110, a plasmid-free JH2-2 transconjugant containing
Tn916, was the positive control donor of Tn916
(20). Recipients were either streptomycin-resistant or
rifampin- and fusidic acid-resistant variants of pneumococcal control
isolate R6. Transconjugants were confirmed by testing for
tet(M), ermAM, and aphA-3 by PCR and
by PFGE profile analysis. The transfer frequency for each mating was
calculated as the rate per donor CFU.
DNA isolation.
Genomic DNA was isolated from pneumococcal
cultures by two methods: (i) the Puregene DNA isolation kit (Gentra
Systems, Inc., Research Triangle Park, N.C.) was used according to the
manufacturer's directions, except that spheroplasting of the cells was
aided by the addition of mutanolysin (10 U/ml) and lysozyme (2.5 mg/ml), and (ii) a mutanolysin extraction procedure was used followed by a modification of the salting out method described by Miller et al.
(38). Plasmid DNA was isolated from streptococci by the method of Anderson and McKay (1) with modifications as
described previously (32) and from Escherichia
coli by the method of Birnboim and Doly (4).
PCR-based detection of ermAM, aphA-3, and
tet(M).
Pneumococcal genomic DNA was assayed for the
presence of ermAM, aphA-3, and tet(M)
by PCR. The oligonucleotide primers used for the amplification of a
550-bp segment of erm-AM were 5' TTG GAA CAG GTA AAG GGC
ATT 3' (forward primer) and 5' TTT GGC GTG TTT CAT TGC TTG 3' (reverse
primer). The first 5' bases of the primers correspond to positions 431 and 981, respectively, in the published sequence (61). The
100-µl reaction mixture contained 50 mM KCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.3),
1.5 mM MgCl2, 1 µM oligonucleotide primers, 200 µM each
deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate, and 2.5 U of native Taq
DNA polymerase (Perkin-Elmer Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.).
The PCR assay was performed in a GeneAmp PCR System 9600 thermal cycler
(Perkin-Elmer Applied Biosystems) with the following cycling
parameters: initial denaturation at 94°C for 5 min followed by 35 cycles of 94°C for 1 min, 53°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 2 min. A
291-bp segment of aphA-3 corresponding to positions 988 to
1279 in the published sequence (60) was amplified with
oligonucleotide primers aphA-3-1 and aphA-3-2 as described previously
(62). A 1,249-bp segment of the tet(M) gene
corresponding to positions 216 to 1464 in the published sequence of the
gene associated with Tn1545 (35) was amplified
with the oligonucleotide primers TETM1 (forward) and TETM3 (reverse) as described by Olsvik et al. (45).
Amplification and DNA sequence analysis of an internal fragment
of tet(M).
Oligonucleotide primers TETM2 and TETM3
(45) were used to amplify, from genomic DNA, a 740-bp
segment of the tet(M) gene corresponding to positions 725 to
1464 in the published sequence from Tn1545 (35).
PCR products were purified with QIAquick PCR purification columns
(Qiagen, Inc., Chatsworth, Calif.). Additional oligonucleotide primers
identified for DNA sequencing were TETM (Up/1092; 5' TGA AGT TAA ATA
GTG TTC TTG G 3') and TETM (Dn/1113; 5' CCA AGA ACA CTA TTT AAC TTC A
3'). The first 5' bases of the primers correspond to positions 1092 and
1113, respectively, in the published sequence of tet(M)
carried by Tn1545 (35). Cycle sequencing was
performed in a GeneAmp PCR System 9600 thermal cycler with the ABI
Prism dRhodamine Terminator Cycle Sequencing Ready Reaction Kit
(Perkin-Elmer Applied Biosystems). These products were analyzed on an
ABI Prism 377 DNA Sequencer (Perkin-Elmer Applied Biosystems). In order
to eliminate errors that may have been introduced during amplification,
the DNA sequences of leading and lagging strands were determined with
products from independent PCRs.
Probes and Southern hybridization.
The ermAM
probe consisted of a 1.7-kb SstI-HindIII
fragment containing ermAM of pAM
1 originally present in
pCER110 (50). The probe for Tn917 was pAM225
(32), composed of pBR325 plus a 5.6-kb insert containing
Tn917. To avoid cross hybridization of vector DNA on blots
containing authentic Tn917 sequences, the latter consisted
of plasmid pAM238 (32) composed of the streptococcal plasmid
pVA380-1 with the same 5.6-kb Tn917-containing insert as
pAM225. 32P labeling of the ermAM probe was by
random priming, and that of pAM225 containing Tn917 was by
nick translation; both procedures were done according to the procedures
of Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, Md.
DNA probes were also prepared from fragments generated by PCR with
ermAM, aphA-3, and tet(M) intragenic
primers, excised from agarose gels, and purified with the Spin-X
centrifuge unit (Costar, Cambridge, Mass.). The amplification products
were labeled with digoxigenin by use of a randomly primed DNA labeling
reaction (Boehringer Mannheim Corp., Indianapolis, Ind.). Agarose gel
electrophoresis of endonuclease-cleaved DNA prepared in situ in agarose
blocks, preparation of Southern blots, and hybridization under
stringent conditions were all performed as described previously
(32, 36).
Inverse PCR and DNA sequence analysis.
The DNA region
flanking Tn917 was obtained by inverse PCR by the method of
Ochman et al. (43), with the following modifications. S. pneumoniae genomic DNA was digested with
HindIII (Life Technologies). Fragments were ligated
under conditions favoring the production of monomeric circles. (The DNA
concentration in the ligation reaction was <0.5 µg/ml). The ligated
monomeric circles were used as DNA templates for PCR and were amplified
with the Expand High-Fidelity PCR system (Boehringer Mannheim Corp.),
as suggested by the supplier. Primers L2 (5'-CTC ACA ATA GAG AGA TGT
CAC GCT C-3') and HDL4 (5'-TCG CTT GGC TAA AAG ACA TTC CAG G-3') and
primers R2 (5'-GCC TTG AAA CAT TGG TTT AGT GGG A-3') and HDR5 (5'-TTC
CGT CTG AAG CAG TGG TT-3') were synthesized (Center for Advanced DNA
Technology, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio)
and were used to amplify the left and right Tn917 junction
fragments, respectively. The resulting inverse PCR products were
purified with the Wizard PCR Preps Purification System (Promega Corp., Madison, Wis.) and were submitted to the Center for Advanced DNA Technology (University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio) for nucleic acid sequencing. Primers L2 and R5 were used in the initial
sequencing reactions. Primers for the reverse-strand sequencing reactions were synthesized on the basis of the results for the initial
sequences that were obtained. The nucleotide sequences were analyzed
with the MacDNASIS sequence analysis software package (Hitachi
Software, San Bruno, Calif.). Both the nucleotide sequences and the
predicted amino acid sequences were compared to sequences in the
National Center for Biotechnology Information databases by using the
BLAST network service.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The DNA sequences of
the left and right junctions of Tn917 have been assigned
GenBank accession no. AF066796 and AF066797, respectively.
 |
RESULTS |
Bacterial strains.
The organisms and their relevant
characteristics are presented in Table 1.
Erythromycin MICs for all isolates were
64 µg/ml, and all isolates
were also clindamycin resistant (MICs,
64 µg/ml). It was not
possible to determine the induction of erythromycin and clindamycin
resistance because none of the isolates produced a zone of inhibition
around erythromycin and clindamycin disks. All isolates with the
exception of isolate E42 were resistant to tetracycline; isolate E42
was susceptible to tetracycline, yet it still had tet(M).
Chloramphenicol resistance was variable.
SmaI digests of genomic DNA from serotype 23F isolates E1,
E2, and E6 produced PFGE patterns similar to that of the
multidrug-resistant, serotype 23F Spanish clone, while serotype 6B
isolates E16, E12, E43, 3543, and 2649 had SmaI PFGE
profiles that resembled that of the serotype 6B Spain/ Iceland clone.
The PFGE banding patterns of the other isolates (isolates 1003, E41,
E42, and BM4200), which were all nontypeable in our hands, were unique.
PCR studies.
All of the isolates were tested for the presence
of ermAM, tet(M), and aphA-3 by PCR.
Each was positive for ermAM and tet(M), including
isolate E42, which was tetracycline susceptible, but only BM4200 was
positive for aphA-3 (Table 1).
Hybridization studies.
Genomic DNA was prepared from all of
the isolates, digested with AvaI, separated on an agarose
gel, transferred to nylon filters, and hybridized to a Tn917
probe. DNA from isolates E2, E16, E41, and 1003 contained three
AvaI fragments that hybridized to the probe, and all three
fragments were the same size as those predicted from the sequence of
Tn917 (54) (Fig.
1). These three AvaI fragments account for 99.9% of authentic Tn917 (3, 12).
For isolate E1 there was a slight variation in the size of the second
fragment that hybridized to the Tn917 probe. This fragment
represented the right-hand end of the transposon. Isolates BM4200, E6,
E12, E42, E43, 3543, and 2649 demonstrated only a single large
AvaI fragment that hybridized to the probe.

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FIG. 1.
Southern blot of pneumococcal DNA digested with
AvaI and hybridized with Tn917. MM, molecular
mass marker.
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DNA sequencing studies.
To determine whether the
Tn917-like elements inserted into the same or random sites
in the chromosomes of S. pneumoniae E1, E2, E16, and 1003, the right and left junctions of the putative Tn917
transposon within the chromosome were generated by inverse PCR (IPCR),
and the DNA sequences were determined. After repeated attempts, we were
not able to obtain the right end of the Tn917-like element
of isolate E1. The Tn917-like element appeared to be
inserted in a Tn916-like conjugative transposon at base
14525 (base numbers are from the sequence of Flannagan et al.
[17]) and included a 5-base duplication (AGGTA) (Fig.
2 and Fig. 3A and
B). The left ends of the
Tn917-like elements of all four isolates was near tet(M) (orf11) of Tn916. The right
ends of the Tn917-like elements of three of the isolates
were near the end containing the int-Tn and
xis-Tn functions. A search of the DNA data bank revealed
that this Tn917-like element was inserted within a structure
similar to orf9 of Tn916 (17), which
is downstream of the transcription termination site of
tet(M) (56). The sequences of the relevant regions of Tn916, Tn917, and the
Tn917-like junction elements are shown with the IPCR
fragments in Fig. 3A and B. The left ends of isolates E1, E2, E16, and
1003 yielded PCR products of similar sizes, and the sequences of these
products were identical to each other; however, the right ends of
isolates E2, E16, and 1003, which contained pneumococcal DNA, yielded
products that varied in size, as follows: E2, 5.0 kb; E16, 4.0 kb; and
1003, 3.5 kb.

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FIG. 2.
Schematic diagram showing insertion of Tn917
into Tn916 in S. pneumoniae. Relevant open
reading frames (orfs) and restriction endonuclease sites are indicated.
Numbers indicate nucleotide numbers based on GenBank sequences of
Tn917 and Tn916. Location and the 5' to 3'
direction of IPCR primers are indicated under the schematic for
Tn917. Tn917 was inserted into orf9 at
base 14525 in the published sequence of Tn916.
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FIG. 3.
Nucleotide sequences of left and right IPCR fragments,
Tn916 and Tn917, respectively. The beginnings and
ends of orf6 and orf9 are as indicated. Uppercase
letters indicate Tn916-derived sequences; lowercase letters
indicate Tn917-derived sequences. Numbers at the right of
the Tn916 and Tn917 sequences indicate nucleotide
numbers based on GenBank sequences. The AvaI sites at the
left and right termini of Tn917 are underlined. The
positions of primers L2 and R2 are indicated by arrows below the
sequence of Tn917. The 5-base target site duplication is
boxed. (A) Sequence of the Tn917 left terminal junction
fragment. (B) Sequence of the Tn917 right terminal
junction.
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To confirm that Tn917 was inserted into a
Tn916-like element, a 740-bp segment from the middle of
tet(M) from S. pneumoniae E2, E16, and 1003 was
sequenced since this region shows 66-bp differences between the
tet(M) carried by Tn1545 (35) and that carried by Tn916 (17). DNA sequence results were
compared to those obtained for S. pneumoniae BM4200
(Tn1545) and E. faecalis CG110
(Tn916). Analysis of the tet(M) sequences
obtained from isolate E2 showed that 50 of the 66 variable sites were
identical to those found in Tn916, while 16 of the sites
matched those found in Tn1545. E16 showed 29 Tn916-like sites and 37 Tn1545-like sites. Finally, for isolate 1003, 58 of the 66 variable sites were
Tn1545-like, while the remainder matched those in the gene
found in Tn916. The Tn916- and
Tn1545-like segments of tet(M) found in these
S. pneumoniae isolates appeared as relatively discrete
blocks forming a mosaic pattern, as opposed to being scattered
throughout the portion of the gene that was sequenced.
Filter matings.
We attempted to transfer the
Tn916/Tn917-like element from isolates E1, E2,
E16, and 1003 using S. pneumoniae R6 variants as recipients.
S. pneumoniae BM4200 (Tn1545) and E. faecalis CG110 (Tn916) were used as positive mating
controls. While Tn1545 transferred to R6 at a frequency of
8 × 10
8 transconjugants per donor cell and
Tn916 transferred to R6 at a frequency of 5 × 10
7 transconjugants per donor cell, we did not detect the
transfer of the cointegrate to strain R6 in multiple mating
experiments.
 |
DISCUSSION |
In S. pneumoniae, drug resistance determinants such as
those encoding erythromycin resistance usually are located on
conjugative transposons that insert into the host chromosome rather
than on plasmids, which are very rare in pneumococcal isolates
(5). Erythromycin-resistant strains of S. pneumoniae are becoming more common in the United States and
around the world (22, 26-28, 66). MLS resistance in
pneumococci was assumed to be due to the presence of Tn1545,
a conjugative transposon that encodes ermAM, in addition to
tet(M) and aphA-3 (6, 13).
Tn1545 shares a high degree of homology with
Tn916, having termini identical to those of
Tn916, a transposon that also encodes resistance to tetracycline but not to kanamycin or erythromycin (10, 52). Tn916 was the first conjugative transposon to be identified
(10, 19) and is the prototype of a closely related family of
conjugative transposons widespread in gram-positive cocci (10, 46,
53). The nucleotide base sequence of the entire transposon has
been determined (17). In this study, we demonstrated the
presence of the MLS resistance determinant (ermAM) on an
element similar to the enterococcal transposon, Tn917, in
several different strains of S. pneumoniae. In the three
isolates examined, sequence data for the right and left junctions of
the Tn917-like element demonstrate that this transposon
inserted into the same site within the enterococcal conjugative
transposon, Tn916, or a Tn916-like structure. We
have designated this composite transposon Tn3872 and have
selected E2 as the prototype strain.
Whether the integration of the Tn917-like element into
Tn916 occurred in a strain of S. pneumoniae
directly or occurred first in an enterococcal strain (or another
bacterial species) and was transferred subsequently to a strain of
S. pneumoniae cannot be determined from these results.
However, we believe that the latter is the more likely explanation on
the basis of the following observations. First, a
Tn917-Tn916 composite has been generated
experimentally in E. faecalis (designated
Tn925::Tn917) (7) and was
capable of transferring in broth matings to a Bacillus
subtilis recipient, suggesting that the composite transposon could
function as a conjugal delivery system for the Tn917
element. Second, it has been well established that the
Tn916-Tn1545 family has a broad host range and
that members of the Tn916 family of transposons can be
transferred by conjugation to numerous bacterial species (11, 16,
21). In this study we demonstrated that Tn916 can be
transferred from E. faecalis to the S. pneumoniae
R6 recipient strain. Third, several of the other transposons in the
Tn916-Tn1545 family have complex structures
involving more than one transposable element in a composite arrangement
(e.g., Tn5253 [2, 5, 63, 64],
Tn3951 [24], and Tn3701
[23, 33, 34]). In each case, their extensive homology
in the regions of DNA surrounding the tet(M) determinant suggests that Tn916 could have served as the precursor in
the evolution of these larger elements (2, 7, 11, 20, 44).
Several other questions with regard to the dissemination of the
transposons in pneumococci remain. The first concerns whether the three
strains in this study contain the same composite transposon, Tn3872. Although the limited sequence data for the
Tn917 junctions suggest this to be the case, the sequence
data for tet(M) from three isolates suggest either that the
origins of tet(M) may be different or that rearrangements of
tet(M) occurred after the composite was introduced into its
pneumococcal host. When the sequence data for nine tet(M)
genes (44), including the tet(M) of
Tn1545 from S. pneumoniae BM4200 and
tet(M) of Tn916 from E. faecalis, were
aligned with the tet(M) sequence data for the three Tn3872 isolates, a striking mosaic pattern of
tet(M) sequences from Tn916 and Tn1545
was revealed. Of the 66 variable nucleotide positions observed, all but
2 of the sites for all nine organisms aligned with either
tet(M) of Tn916 or tet(M) of
Tn1545. While tet(M) from S. pneumoniae E2 (a member of the 23F Spanish clone) had more sites
aligning with tet(M) of Tn916 (from E. faecalis CG110 [17]), the tet(M) of
S. pneumoniae 1003 resembled the tet(M) of
Tn1545 (from pneumococcal isolate BM4200
[35]). The variable sites present in the first half of
tet(M) from E16 (6B Spain/Iceland clone) were the same as
those in the tet(M) from Tn1545, whereas the
variable sites of the second half were the same as those in
tet(M) of Tn916. Although there are no direct data indicating whether the heterogeneity of the tet(M)
locus occurred before or after integration of the element into
pneumococci, we speculate that the latter is the case and that the
mosaic structure of tet(M) evolved through homologous
recombination in the pneumococcus after integration of
Tn3872 into the host chromosome. In support of this, Norgren
and Scott (42) have shown that the presence of
Tn916 on the chromosome does not prevent the introduction of a second element into the cell and that up to 10% of incoming elements
recombine with the resident transposon, resulting in mosaics of various
transposon-encoded genes.
Has the introduction of Tn3872 into the pneumococcal
chromosome occurred on multiple occasions? Since the left junction
fragment of the Tn917-like insertion appeared to be
identical in all three strains and was composed entirely of
Tn917- and Tn916-derived sequences and the right
junction fragments were all of different sizes and included
pneumococcal chromosomal DNA, we speculate that Tn3872 has
been transferred as a composite transposon to at least these three
different strains of S. pneumoniae. However, it is possible
that since the three isolates were from different pneumococcal clones,
this region of the chromosome represents an area where mutational
events may be more common, possibly resulting in the fragment length
polymorphisms at the right junction fragment of Tn3872 that
we observed. Further sequence analysis will help to differentiate
between minor mutations in the same region of insertion or between
totally different insertion sites in three different strains of
S. pneumoniae. The possibility that Tn3872 has
inserted by homologous recombination rather than by transposition into
the same region of the chromosome of three different strains of
S. pneumoniae must also be considered.
Although we were able to transfer Tn916 from an enterococcal
donor to a pneumococcal recipient and Tn1545 from one
pneumococcus to another pneumococcus in filter matings, we were unable
to transfer the composite transposon Tn3872 under the same
conditions. It is possible that the transfer frequency of
Tn3872 was too low to be detected, or it may be that
Tn3872 is incapable of transferring in pneumococci either
because the insertion of Tn917 into orf9 has
inactivated the mobility of Tn916 or because the inserted Tn3872 has subsequently suffered a deletion that resulted in
a loss of mobility (58).
Among the isolates in this study are several that belong to the
multiple-antimicrobial agent-resistant serotype 23F lineage known as
the "Spanish clone" (36, 39). Two of these, E1 and E2,
appear to have acquired the Tn3872 sequences. The appearance of erythromycin resistance has been noted before in this clone (29, 36); however, the genetic determinant responsible for this resistance was not reported. The Tn3872 element was
also found in the 6B Spain/Iceland clone (55) and in several
nontypeable isolates of pneumococci from different geographic regions.
Thus, acquisition of this composite element may not be an uncommon
event.
Six additional clinical isolates from the United States have what may
be modified forms of Tn916 and Tn1545 on the
basis of the size of the hybridization products and the lack of
internal AvaI sites. They also lack the aphA-3
kanamycin resistance gene. This group of isolates also contains
representatives of the Spanish 23F and Spain/Iceland serotype 6B
clones. Our data suggest that the ermAM determinant has
entered into these and other clones on multiple occasions on at least
two different types of transposons, i.e., a composite Tn3872
transposon and a Tn916/Tn1545-like element. While
composite transposons, such as Tn5253, previously known as
(cat tet) (2, 8), have been reported to
reside in pneumococci, this is the first report of such a compound
element in pneumococci that mediates erythromycin resistance associated
with transposon Tn917. The ability of pneumococci to harbor
and transmit composite transposons may explain, in part, the plethora
of multiple-drug-resistant strains now being observed around the globe.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Terry Thompson and Bertha Hill for technical assistance.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Nosocomial
Pathogens Laboratory Branch (G08), Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, 1600 Clifton Rd., Atlanta, GA 30333. Phone: (404) 639-3246. Fax: (404) 639-1381. E-mail: FNT1{at}CDC.GOV.
 |
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