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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, November 1999, p. 2671-2677, Vol. 43, No. 11
0066-4804/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Diversity of TEM Mutants in Proteus
mirabilis
R.
Bonnet,1,*
C.
De Champs,1
D.
Sirot,1
C.
Chanal,1
R.
Labia,2 and
J.
Sirot1
Laboratoire de Bactériologie,
Faculté de Médecine, 63001 Clermont-Ferrand
Cedex,1 and UMR 175, CNRS-MNHN,
29000 Quimper,2 France
Received 24 February 1999/Returned for modification 29 June
1999/Accepted 18 August 1999
 |
ABSTRACT |
In a survey of resistance to amoxicillin among clinical isolates of
Proteus mirabilis, 10 TEM-type
-lactamases were
characterized: (i) the well-known penicillinases TEM-1 and TEM-2, the
extended-spectrum
-lactamases (ESBLs) TEM-3 and TEM-24, and the
inhibitor-resistant TEM (IRT) TEM-44 and (ii) five novel enzymes, a
penicillinase TEM-57 similar to TEM-1, an ESBL TEM-66 similar to TEM-3,
and three IRTs, TEM-65, TEM-73, and TEM-74. The penicillinase TEM-57 and the ESBL TEM-66 differed from TEM-1 and TEM-3, respectively, by the
amino acid substitution Gly-92
Asp (nucleotide mutation G-477
A).
This substitution could have accounted for the decrease in pIs (5.2 for
TEM-57 and 6.0 for TEM-66) but did not necessarily affect the intrinsic
activities of these enzymes. The IRT TEM-65 was an IRT-1-like IRT
(Cys-244) related to TEM-2 (Lys-39). The two other IRTs, TEM-73 and
TEM-74, were related to IRT-1 (Cys-244) and IRT-2 (Ser-244),
respectively, and harbored the amino acid substitutions Leu-21
Phe
and Thr-265
Met. In this study, the ESBLs TEM-66, TEM-24, and TEM-3
were encoded by large (170- to 180-kb) conjugative plasmids that
exhibited similar patterns after digestion and hybridization with the
TEM and AAC(6')I probes. The three IRTs TEM-65, TEM-73, and TEM-74 were
encoded by plasmids that ranged in size from 42 to 70 kb but for which
no transfer was obtained. The characterization of five new
plasmid-mediated TEM-type
-lactamases and the first report of TEM-24
in P. mirabilis are evidence of the wide diversity of
-lactamases produced in this species and of its possible role as a
-lactamase-encoding plasmid reservoir.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Proteus mirabilis is a
species of the family Enterobacteriaceae commonly isolated
in clinical laboratories during local and systemic infections; however,
it has a predilection for the urinary tract (29). In studies
performed at the Royal London Hospital in 1991 and, more recently, in
French hospitals, P. mirabilis represented 15 and 8.3% of
isolates of the family Enterobacteriaceae, respectively
(21, 25). Thus, P. mirabilis is the second most often isolated species of the family Enterobacteriaceae,
after Escherichia coli (64.6%) and before Klebsiella
pneumoniae (5.9%) (25).
In hospitals the rate of amoxicillin resistance among P. mirabilis isolates is close to that among E. coli
isolates (43 versus 46%) (25).
TEM penicillinases belong to Bush group 2b (7) and are the
most common
-lactamases in P. mirabilis species. TEM-1 is
the most common enzyme and is produced by 58.6% of
penicillinase-producing P. mirabilis isolates. This species
is distinguished by a high frequency of TEM-2 production (produced by
37.7% of penicillinase-producing P. mirabilis isolates)
(9).
TEM-type extended-spectrum
-lactamases (ESBLs), which are members of
group 2be (7) and which were initially observed in France in
K. pneumoniae species (34), were also described
in P. mirabilis strains by Mariotte et al. (24)
in 1994. A study of the ESBLs produced by members of the family
Enterobacteriaceae performed in Clermont-Ferrand, France,
hospitals showed an increase in TEM-3 prevalence in P. mirabilis species between 1990 (0%; 0 of 338) and 1994 (6%; 15 of 244), making this enzyme the most often reported ESBL in the species
(10). Since then, two other ESBLs, TEM-10 and TEM-26, have
been characterized in P. mirabilis in the United States and
South Africa, respectively (27, 28).
An inhibitor-resistant TEM (IRT), TEM-44 (IRT-13), which is a member of
group 2br (7) and which is related to TEM-2, was recently observed in P. mirabilis (5).
In addition to the previously described TEM-1, TEM-2, TEM-3, TEM-24,
and TEM-44 enzymes, which have been observed, five novel enzymes are
described in this report.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial strains and plasmids.
Since 1996, amoxicillin-resistant strains of P. mirabilis isolated from
patients hospitalized in different units of the teaching hospital of
Clermont-Ferrand were screened for their resistance phenotypes:
penicillinase, ESBL, and IRT producers. All ESBL and IRT enzymes and
some penicillinases were studied by isoelectric focusing. One strain
representative of each resistance phenotype and each isoelectric point
value was retained for further analysis: three ESBL producers (CF39,
CF249, and CF669), four IRT producers (CF449, CF659, CF739, and CF749),
and one penicillinase producer (CF579). Penicillinase-producing strains
P. mirabilis CF19 (TEM-1) and CF29 (TEM-2), isolated in 1994 at the Clermont-Ferrand hospital, were studied for comparison
(blaTEM gene sequencing was performed). Rifampin- or nalidixic acid-resistant mutants of E. coli
HB101 [supE44 hsdS20 (rB
mB
) recA13 ara-14 proA2 lacY1 galK2
rpsL20 xyl-5 mtl-1] (30) and P. mirabilis
ATCC 29906, obtained in vitro as described previously (30),
were used as recipients during mating-out assays. Plasmids RSa (39.5 kb), TP114 (61 kb), pCFF04 (TEM-3-encoding plasmid of 85 kb)
(34), pCFF74 (TEM-24-encoding plasmid of 85 kb)
(11), pCFF14 (TEM-5-encoding plasmid of 180 kb)
(11), and pCFF134 (TEM-3-encoding plasmid of K. pneumoniae CF34 isolated in our hospital) were used for comparison.
Mating-out assays and plasmid content.
Direct transfer of
resistance into rifampin- or nalidixic acid-resistant strain E. coli HB101 or P. mirabilis ATCC 10381T was
performed by overnight mating of logarithmic-phase cells at 37°C on
drug-free liquid and solid Mueller-Hinton medium. Transconjugants were
selected on Mueller-Hinton agar plates containing rifampin (300 µg/ml) or nalidixic acid (150 µg/ml) and either amoxicillin (100 µg/ml), ceftazidime (4 µg/ml), or cefotaxime (2 µg/ml).
The sizes of the plasmids were estimated after plasmid DNA extraction
by the method of Kado and Liu (19), and their
electrophoretic migrations in a 1% agarose gel were compared to those
of standard plasmids.
The study of plasmid restriction fragments was performed with plasmid
DNA that was extracted by the alkaline lysis method and cesium
chloride-ethidium bromide equilibrium centrifugation (30)
and that was digested with restriction endonucleases
HindIII, EcoRI, and SalI
(Boehringer Mannheim), as recommended by the manufacturer. Restriction fragments were visualized after electrophoresis in 0.8% agarose gels with a 1-kb DNA ladder (Eurogentec).
Hybridization.
The DNA probes used for hybridization
were PCR products which were labeled with 32P as described
previously (30). The specific amplification was achieved
under standard conditions with the primers TEM-A and TEM-B
(22) and the primers AAC6'-A
(5'-TTGTTACGGTACCTTGCCTC-3') and AAC6'-B
(5'-TTGCAATGCTGAATGGAGAG-3') (temperature of annealing, 58°C), which are specific for the gene that encodes the enzyme AAC(6')I (23). Hybridization and autoradiography were
performed as described previously (30) with DNA that had
been transferred to and immobilized on Nytran filters.
Susceptibility to
-lactams.
MICs were determined by a
dilution method on Mueller-Hinton agar (Sanofi Diagnostics Pasteur,
Marnes la Coquette, France) with an inoculum of 104 CFU per
spot. Antibiotics were provided as powders by SmithKline Beecham
Pharmaceuticals (amoxicillin, ticarcillin, and clavulanate), Lederle
Laboratories (piperacillin, tazobactam), Eli Lilly, Paris, France
(cephalothin), Roussel-Uclaf (cefotaxime), Glaxo Wellcome Research and
Development (ceftazidime), and Bristol-Myers Squibb (aztreonam).
Detection of ESBLs was performed by a modified double-disk synergy test
as described previously (35). It was performed by the disk
diffusion method on Mueller-Hinton agar. Antibiotic disks for agar
tests were obtained from Sanofi Diagnostics Pasteur.
Isoelectric focusing.
Isoelectric focusing was performed
with polyacrylamide gels containing ampholines with a pH range of 3.5 to 10 as described previously (32).
-Lactamases with
known pIs were used as standards: TEM-1 (pI 5.4), TEM-2 (pI 5.6), TEM-3
(pI 6.3), and TEM-24 (pI 6.5).
Determination of
-lactamase kinetic constants
(Km, Vmax and
IC50).
The Km and
Vmax constants of the
-lactamases were
obtained by the computerized microacidimetric method described
previously (20) with enzymes purified as follows. Bacterial
strains were obtained from 4 liters of culture grown in brain heart
infusion broth. The cells were harvested by centrifugation at
5,800 × g for 30 min. The pellets (weight, about
20 g) were washed by resuspension in 40 ml of a 0.85 mM NaCl
solution (solution A), and the suspension was centrifuged as described
above, and the supernatants were discarded. Then, the pellets were
resuspended in 40 ml of the same solution and lysed by ultrasonic
treatment. The crude extracts were cleared by centrifugation at
48,000 × g for 30 min at 40°C and then by filtration
on microgranular cellulose (Sigma). Nucleic acids were precipitated by
the addition of spermine (0.2 M) and centrifugation (30,000 × g for 30 min at 4°C), dialyzed one night against 5 liters of
solution A, and concentrated. The enzyme was then chromatographed on a
Bio-Rex 70 resin (weakly acidic cation exchanger) with an ammonium
carbonate-bicarbonate buffer (pH 7.0) gradient. Active fractions were
pooled. The relative Vmax values were compared
with the Vmax for benzylpenicillin, which was
taken as 100%. The concentrations of the inhibitors (clavulanate and tazobactam) required to inhibit enzyme activity by 50%
(IC50s) were determined as described previously for
penicillin G (33).
ASPCR.
The allele-specific PCR (ASPCR) (40) was
used to detect the known mutations at nucleotide positions 32, 317, 512, 692, 911, 914, 917, and 929. Templates of DNA from the studied
strains and standard strains were simultaneously amplified in different
tubes, in an allele-specific manner, in a Gene Amp PCR System 2004 DNA thermal cycler (Perkin-Elmer Cetus Instruments). All PCR products were
loaded on an agarose gel. Thus, the presence of an amplified fragment
with an allele-specific primer and its absence with the other
allele-specific primer provide a direct confirmation of detection of genotypes.
DNA sequencing.
All results obtained by ASPCR were confirmed
by DNA sequencing. The sequences were determined by direct sequencing
of specific amplified products obtained as described previously
(22) with genomic template DNA prepared by boiling fresh
overnight cultures grown in Luria-Bertani broth or with plasmid DNA
extracted by the procedure of Kado and Liu (19) and purified
(spin-X column; Costar, Cambridge, Mass.). It was performed by the
dideoxy chain termination procedure of Sanger et al. (31) on
an ABI 1377 automatic sequencer with the ABI PRISM Dye Terminator Cycle
Sequencing Ready Reaction Kit with Ampli-Taq DNA polymerase FS
(Perkin-Elmer, Applied Biosystems Division, Foster City, Calif.).
 |
RESULTS |
Resistance phenotypes (MICs) for P. mirabilis
strains.
The P. mirabilis isolates formed three groups
in relation to the
-lactam MICs for the strains. (i) The first group
was represented by three strains: the TEM-1- and TEM-2-producing
strains CF19 and CF29 and strain CF579, which produced a penicillinase
with an atypical pI (see below). These three strains were susceptible to ticarcillin-clavulanate (MIC, 2 µg/ml), piperacillin-tazobactam (MICs, 0.5 to 1 µg/ml), and cephalothin (MIC, 8 µg/ml). Strain CF579 harbored a level of resistance to
-lactams comparable to that
observed for the TEM-2-producing strain CF29 (Table
1), suggesting higher levels of
penicillinase production in strains CF29 and CF579 than in strain CF19.
(ii) The second group consisted of P. mirabilis CF39, CF249,
and CF669. The modified double-disk synergy test was positive. Their
-lactam resistance phenotypes were characterized by high levels of
resistance to amoxicillin (MIC, 1,024 µg/ml), ticarcillin (MIC, 256 µg/ml), and cephalothin (MIC, 32 µg/ml) (data not shown). The MICs
of cefotaxime, ceftazidime, and aztreonam (Table
2), even though they were low, were
appreciably higher than those obtained for TEM-producing P. mirabilis (0.06 to 8 versus 0.03 to 0.12 µg/ml). The MICs
observed for E. coli transconjugants were higher than those
observed for P. mirabilis (2- to 30-fold) except for that
for strain CF669 (Table 2). Clavulanate (2 µg/ml) restored the MICs
of cefotaxime, ceftazidime, and aztreonam (MICs,
0.25 µg/ml).
(iii) P. mirabilis CF449, CF659, CF739, and CF749
constituted the third group (Table 3).
They were characterized by similar high levels of resistance to
amoxicillin and amoxicillin-clavulanate (MICs, 64 to 1,024 µg/ml) and
low levels of resistance to ticarcillin (MICs, 1 to 32 µg/ml). These
strains were susceptible to ticarcillin-clavulanate (MICs, 1 to 4 µg/ml) and were mainly susceptible to cephalosporins, including
cephalothin (MICs, 2 to 4 µg/ml). These phenotypes of resistance
to
-lactam antibiotics differed from those observed for TEM-1-
and TEM-2-producing strains CF19 and CF29 by the higher MICs of
amoxicillin-clavulanate (4 to 16 µg/ml) and lower MICs of ticarcillin
(128 to 512 µg/ml) and, to a lesser extent, the MICs of cephalothin
(8 µg/ml) (Table 1).
-Lactamase characterization.
For the first group of
penicillinases, the
-lactamase of strain CF579 had kinetic
parameters (Km and Vmax)
similar to those obtained with TEM-1 and TEM-2 (Tables
4 and 5).
These three enzymes had distinctly higher affinities
(Km,
40 µM) for penicillins than those
obtained for cephalothin (
250 µM). The relative
Vmax values for ticarcillin and cephalothin
(
25%) were clearly decreased compared to that for amoxicillin
(
73%). However, a band at pI 5.2 that was distinct from those of
TEM-1 (pI 5.4) and TEM-2 (pI 5.6) was observed for strain CF579 (Table
4).
The ESBL-type
-lactamases of the second group had much greater
relative Vmax values (40 to 1,410%) and had
lower affinities (Kms, 50 to 450 µM) for
broad-spectrum cephalosporins than for amoxicillin and cephalothin
(Kms, 5 to 43 µM; Table
6). The enzyme of strain CF249 (pI 6.5)
had a Vmax value 10-fold higher for ceftazidime than for cefotaxime. Conversely, the
-lactamases of strains CF39 (pI
6.3) and CF669 (pI 6.0) had Vmax values 10-fold
higher for cefotaxime than for ceftazidime (Table 6).
The Vmax values of
-lactamases of strains of
the third group (Table 4) for amoxicillin were higher (
140%) than
those of the TEM penicillinases (
95%) (Table 4). Conversely, the
Vmax values of enzymes of the third group for
ticarcillin and cephalothin were lower (
2.3%) than those of TEM
enzymes (
10%). With regard to the Km values
of TEM-1, the affinities of these enzymes were decreased about 10-fold
for benzylpenicillin and amoxicillin and 26- to 74-fold for ticarcillin
(Table 4). Clavulanate and tazobactam IC50s were 50- to
200-fold higher for
-lactamases of strains in this group than for
penicillinases TEM-1 and TEM-2 (Table 5). Isoelectric focusing showed
that the
-lactamases of these strains focused at pI 5.2 (strains CF739 and CF749) or pI 5.4 (strains CF449 and CF659).
DNA sequencing.
To confirm the mutations detected by
ASPCR, the complete sequences of the blaTEM
genes were obtained. Globally, the sequences were similar to
those of blaTEM-1A,
blaTEM-1B, and
blaTEM-2. The nucleotide substitutions and
deduced amino acid replacements in relation to the sequence of the
blaTEM-1A gene are summarized in Table
7. The blaTEM
genes of strains CF39, CF249, and CF449 code for previously described
-lactamases: TEM-3 (CTX-1), TEM-24 (CAZ-6), and TEM-44 (IRT-13),
respectively.
(i) In the first group of strains (TEM-like penicillinase production),
the blaTEM gene of the strain CF579 harbored
the nucleotide change C-477
A, which led to the new amino acid
substitution Gly-92
Asp. This enzyme is therefore a new TEM-like
-lactamase, which we designate TEM-57.
(ii) In the second group, the blaTEM gene of
ESBL-producing strain CF669 exhibited the same C-477
A mutation and,
in addition, nucleotide changes at positions 317, 512, and 914, which
led to amino acid substitutions at positions 39, 104, and 238, as in TEM-3. The enzyme produced by CF669 is therefore a new TEM-3-like ESBL,
which we designate TEM-66.
(iii) In the third group, the blaTEM genes
of IRT-producing strains CF739 and CF749 harbored mutations that led to
the presence of Gln-39, as in TEM-1, and, in particular, the amino
acids Phe-21 and Met-265. However, these two enzymes differed at
position 244 by a Ser, as in IRT-2 (strain CF749), and a Cys, as in
IRT-1 (strain CF739). These enzymes are therefore two new IRT-type
-lactamases, which we designate TEM-74 (IRT-2-like) and TEM-73
(IRT-1-like), respectively. For the other IRT-producing strain,
strain CF659, the deduced amino acid sequence exhibited Lys-39, as in
TEM-2, and Cys-244, as in IRT-1. This
-lactamase is therefore the
first IRT-1-like enzyme related to TEM-2 and is named TEM-65 (IRT-16).
Known silent mutations at positions 346, 436, 604, 682, and 925 were
also observed in the studied genes (Table 7). The gene sequences of
TEM-24, TEM-44 (IRT-13), TEM-57, TEM-73, and TEM-74 showed a pattern of
silent mutations identical to that in the sequence of gene
blaTEM-2. The
blaTEM genes of strains CF39, CF659, and CF669 differed from blaTEM-2, but
only by nucleotide 436 for the gene of TEM-65, nucleotide 682 for the
gene of TEM-3, and nucleotides 682 and 925 for the gene of TEM-66.
The results for position 32 and the sequences of
blaTEM gene promoters obtained by ASPCR
showed the presence of a T base at position 32 in all genes studied.
The insertion of an A base immediately under this position was observed
in the blaTEM gene promoter of strain CF579
(Table 7).
Plasmid study.
The mating-out assays permitted the transfer of
ESBL-type resistance (strains CF39, CF249, and CF669) in E. coli and P. mirabilis species. The other antibiotics to
which resistance was transferred were identical for these three strains
and for TEM-3-producing strain K. pneumoniae CF34:
kanamycin, tobramycin, amikacin, netilmicin, tetracyclines,
trimethoprim, and sulfonamides. In contrast, no transconjugant was
obtained under our conditions with the TEM-like- and IRT-like-producing strains.
Plasmid visualization in agarose gels and hybridization with the TEM
probe of ESBL-producing transconjugants showed one plasmid of about 170 to 180 kb for each of the strains P. mirabilis CF39, CF249, and CF669 and K. pneumoniae CF34 (Fig.
1). The digestion of these four plasmids
and the hybridization with the TEM and AAC(6')I probes showed a
fragment of 11 kb that was common with the
EcoRI-SalI digestion patterns. In the same way,
two fragments of 11.5 and 13 kb were observed to be in common with the
EcoRI-HindIII digestion patterns for all
plasmids except the plasmid of strain CF39, which did not provide the
13-kb hybridized fragment (data not shown).

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FIG. 1.
(A) Agarose (0.7%) electrophoresis of plasmid DNA from
ESBL-producing E. coli transconjugants and from
IRT-producing P. mirabilis. (B) Hybridization with
TEM-specific DNA probes. Lanes: 1, plasmid RSa (39 kb); 2, plasmid
TP114 (61 kb); 3, pCFF04 (TEM-3; 85 kb); 4, pCFF74 (TEM-24; 85 kb); 5, pCFF14 (TEM-5; 180 kb); 6, pCFF134 (TEM-3); 7, TrCF669 (TEM-66); 8, TrCF39 (TEM-3); 9, TrCF249 (TEM-24); 10, CF449 (TEM-44); 11, CF659
(TEM-65).
|
|
The study of the plasmids of IRT-producing P. mirabilis
strains showed for each strain the presence of a plasmid that
hybridized with the TEM probe. The plasmid was about 42 kb for strains
CF449, CF739, and CF749 and about 70 kb for strain CF659 (Fig. 1).
 |
DISCUSSION |
This work reports on five novel
-lactamases and provides
the first description of TEM-24 in P. mirabilis.
TEM-57 (CF579) is a novel penicillinase related to TEM-1
(Gln-39), which is characterized by the Gly
Asp substitution at
position 92 and which constitutes a new polymorphic position of
TEM-type enzymes. TEM-66 (CF669) is a novel ESBL that harbors the amino
acid substitutions that have been described for TEM-3 (36)
and that are associated with the substitution Gly-92
Asp, as in
TEM-57.
The substitution at position 92 of the neutral glycine residue in TEM-1
and TEM-3 by the negatively charged aspartate residue in TEM-57 and
TEM-66 could have accounted for the decrease in pI from 5.4 (TEM-1) to
5.2 (TEM-57) and from 6.3 (TEM-3) to 6.0 (TEM-66).
Crystallographic analysis (18) shows that amino acid 92, located in the loop that joins helices H2b and H3, is far from the
active site of the enzyme. Hence, it probably has no effect on the
intrinsic activity of the enzyme, as suggested by the kinetic
constants, which were similar to those of TEM-1 for TEM-57 and similar
to those of TEM-3 for TEM-66. Although TEM-57 and TEM-66 had the same
substitution, Gly-92
Asp, it seems unlikely that the latter
derives from the former. Hence, nucleotide position 477, at which a
nucleotide substitution led to the amino acid substitution at
position 92, could be a potential hot spot of mutation.
TEM-65 (IRT-16) (CF659) is a novel IRT-1-type (Cys-244) (38)
-lactamase. This enzyme is related to TEM-2 (Lys-39), as in the
previously described IRT-2-type (Ser-244) (38) enzyme TEM-44 (5). TEM-73 (IRT-18) (CF739) and TEM-74 (IRT-19)
(CF749) are two novel IRT enzymes that harbor both the substitutions
Leu-21
Phe and Thr-265
Met that were previously reported in
TEM-like and ESBL
-lactamases. These two enzymes differ by the amino
acid substitution at position 244: Cys in TEM-73 (like IRT-1) and Ser in TEM-74 (like IRT-2).
The study of nucleotide substitutions at positions 32, 226, 263, 317, 346, 436, 604, 682, and 925 of the TEM-24 and TEM-44 genes showed a nucleotide pattern identical to that of gene
blaTEM-2. The nucleotide sequence patterns
of the other genes differed from that of gene
blaTEM-2 by only one or two nucleotides at
position 317, 682, or 925. These other genes could therefore be
considered TEM-2-like genes (8). The
blaTEM genes described here could result
from a complex evolutionary process that originated in gene
blaTEM-2 and/or could reflect the diversity
of the genes that encode the TEM penicillinases.
For all enzymes reported, the nucleotide sequence showed a T at
position 32, as observed in strong promoters (12). Despite these strong promoters, the IRTs in P. mirabilis conferred
low levels of resistance to ticarcillin compared to the levels of resistance of E. coli strains (32). Likewise,
ESBL expression was weak, requiring a modified synergy test for routine
detection (35). When the ESBL-encoding plasmids of P. mirabilis were transferred to E. coli, the level of
resistance to broad-spectrum cephalosporins was higher in E. coli than in P. mirabilis, suggesting the existence of
a factor that leads to weak expression of
-lactam resistance, despite the presence of a strong promoter. The reasons for this discrepancy are not known. It could be the result, as suggested by Wu
et al. (41), of regulational phenomena such as mRNA
transcription attenuation, protease, or export problems. The promoter
of TEM-57 is singular in that it has an adenine immediately under the
thymidine at position 32. This insertion may not affect the strength of the promoter that directs the enzyme gene since a level of resistance similar to that conferred by TEM-2 was observed.
The IRT-encoding plasmids were not transferable by conjugation under
our conditions and were distinctly smaller (42 to 70 kb) than
ESBL-encoding plasmids (170 to 180 kb), which can easily conjugate.
Thus, ESBL-producing P. mirabilis could be a reservoir of
-lactamase-encoding plasmids. In contrast, IRT-producing P. mirabilis, as suggested previously for E. coli
strains (16), may have been selected after mutations
of the TEM gene as a result of pressure from penicillin-inhibitor
associations instead of the acquisition of IRT-encoding plasmids.
In P. mirabilis strains, TEM-3, TEM-24, and TEM-66 were
encoded by large plasmids which were similar in size, which were
associated with similar resistance markers, and which had similar
hybridization patterns. The same plasmid was observed in
TEM-3-producing K. pneumoniae CF34, whereas previously it
was reported that TEM-3 and TEM-24 are encoded by 85-kb plasmids
(13, 17, 34).
In our hospital, a 2-year survey (1997 to 1998) revealed that 14.3% of
the amoxicillin-resistant P. mirabilis strains produce an
ESBL identified as TEM-3 in 73 of 74 isolates (9). In the present study, ESBLs TEM-24 and TEM-66 were encountered for the first
time in this species. The findings of TEM-10 (27),
TEM-26 (28), TEM-8 (26), and TEM-21
(14) in previous studies and our results show the
great diversity of ESBLs in P. mirabilis species.
Two IRTs related to TEM-2, TEM-44 (IRT-13) (5) and
TEM-65 (IRT-16), have been found in P. mirabilis.
The frequency of TEM-2 in P. mirabilis is high: 32.7% of
penicillinase-producing strains (9). This high frequency
could explain why the two IRTs derived from TEM-2 have been
characterized in the species.
The description of TEM-24 in P. mirabilis and the
characterization of five new TEM mutants, TEM-57 (TEM-like), TEM-66
(ESBL), and TEM-65, TEM-73, and TEM-74 (IRTs), show the diversity of
TEM mutants in P. mirabilis. The chromosomal
-lactamase
CMY-3 (6) and the plasmid-mediated
-lactamases CEP-1
(4), CTX-M-2 (3), PER-2 (2), and CMY-4
(39) have also been observed in this species. This diversity
of
-lactamases associated with the high frequency of resistance to
-lactam antibiotics raises the fear that P. mirabilis-resistant strains could become entrenched in hospitals
and could be involved in nosocomial infections, in which case
surveillance of this species for susceptibility to
-lactam antibiotics would be warranted.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Rolande Perroux, Marlène Jan, and Dominique
Rubio for technical assistance.
This work was supported in part by a grant from the Direction de la
Recherche et des Etudes Doctorales of the Ministère de l'Education Nationale of France.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Faculté de
Médecine, Service de Bactériologie-Virologie, 28, place
Henri Dunant, 63 001 Clermont-Ferrand Cedex, France. Phone: 33 (0)4 73 60 80 18. Fax: 33 (0)4 73 27 74 94. E-mail:
Richard.Bonnet{at}u-clermont1.fr.
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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, November 1999, p. 2671-2677, Vol. 43, No. 11
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Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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