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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, February 1999, p. 354-356, Vol. 43, No. 2
0066-4804/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Efflux Pump-Mediated Quinolone Resistance in
Staphylococcus aureus Strains Wild Type for gyrA,
gyrB, grlA, and norA
Juan Luis
Muñoz-Bellido,1
M. A. Alonso
Manzanares,1
J. A. Martínez
Andrés,2
M. N. Gutiérrez
Zufiaurre,1
G.
Ortiz,2
M. Segovia
Hernández,2 and
J. A.
García-Rodríguez1,*
Departamento de Microbiologia, Hospital
Universitario de Salamanca, Salamanca,1 and
Departamento de Microbiologia, Facultad de Medicina, Hospital
General Universitario, Murcia,2 Spain
Received 29 May 1998/Returned for modification 16 July
1998/Accepted 12 November 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
Fluoroquinolone efflux was studied in 47 Staphylococcus
aureus clinical strains with MICs of ciprofloxacin (CFX) of
2
µg/ml. Forty-three strains were wild type for gyrA,
gyrB, and grlA quinolone resistance-determining
regions and for norA and its promoter region. Forty of
these strains (MICs of CFX, 0.1 to 0.2 µg/ml) did not show efflux of
fluoroquinolones. Three strains (MICs of CFX, 1 to 2 µg/ml) showed
efflux. These results suggest that efflux can appear in S. aureus clinical strains in the absence of mutations in
norA and its promoter.
 |
TEXT |
Fluorinated quinolones (FQ) appeared
in the 1980s as synthetic broad-spectrum antibiotics that were very
active mainly against gram-negative bacteria. Mutations in
grlA, the gene encoding topoisomerase IV subunit A, seem to
be the main factor in Staphylococcus aureus resistance to
older FQ, such as ciprofloxacin and ofloxacin (1, 2, 10).
Mutations in DNA gyrase (gyrA mainly) usually appear in the
presence of previous mutations in grlA, leading to
additional increases in MICs (10). Some newer FQ have a
different behavior. The main target for some FQ, in gram-positive
bacteria such as Streptococcus pneumoniae is DNA gyrase,
instead of topoisomerase IV (11). Nevertheless, this
characteristic has not been shown for other gram-positive bacteria.
Another mechanism involved in quinolone resistance in S. aureus is overexpression of norA. This gene encodes a
multidrug efflux protein (NorA) capable of transporting FQ outside the
bacteria (4-6, 16, 17). Overexpression of norA
has been related to mutations 89 bp upstream from the putative ATG
start codon (4, 9). NorA-mediated resistance has been
described in the apparent absence of mutations in topoisomerase genes
(6). Moreover, NorA-mediated resistance can appear both in
the presence (4, 9) and in the absence of promoter mutations
(5). S. aureus strains derived from a single
strain (SA-1199) that can overexpress norA in a constitutive
or inducible manner have been reported. Inducible strains lack promoter
mutations (6).
NorA has been shown to play a role even in quinolone-susceptible
strains, since norA disruption leads to MICs eightfold lower than for the parent strain (16). We have studied the
presence of mutations in the genes encoding DNA gyrase and
topoisomerase IV and in the norA gene and its promoter in
FQ-sensitive and borderline strains. When strains with the same
genotype had different FQ susceptibilities, efflux activity was studied.
Bacterial strains.
Forty-seven S. aureus clinical
strains with ciprofloxacin MICs of
2 µg/ml were studied.
Antimicrobial susceptibility.
MICs of ofloxacin,
ciprofloxacin, sparfloxacin, and trovafloxacin were determined by the
agar dilution method, according to National Committee for Clinical
Laboratory Standards guidelines (8). Drugs were obtained
from their respective manufacturers as standard powders. MIC
determinations were also performed in the presence of 20 µg of
reserpine per ml.
PCR procedures.
gyrA (13), grlA
(1), and gyrB (3) quinolone
resistance-determining regions (QRDRs) and norA
(4) and its promoter region were amplified and sequenced
(12) according to previously described methods.
Uptake of quinolones.
Uptake and accumulation of
fluoroquinolones was determined by the method described by Takenouchi
et al. Fluorescence was used as a means of quantifying FQ
concentrations (15).
The results of sequencing of the four genes appear in Table
1. Among the 47 strains with
ciprofloxacin MICs of
2 µg/ml, four strains showed a mutation in
grlA leading to a Ser80-to-Ile substitution (group B), and
43 strains were wild type for gyrA, gyrB,
grlA, and norA. The four strains with mutations
in grlA showed MICs of ciprofloxacin of 1 to 2 µg/ml.
Among the 43 wild-type strains, we found two groups of strains. Forty
strains showed ciprofloxacin MICs of around 0.1 to 0.2 µg/ml (group
A1). Three strains showed MICs similar to grlA mutant
strains (1 to 2 µg/ml) (group A2).
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|
TABLE 1.
In vitro activities of four quinolones, alone and
combined with reserpine, against the three groups of S. aureus strains studied
|
|
The study of FQ uptake by the wild-type strains in group A1 and the
three grlA mutant strains (group B) led to results similar to the uptake curve appearing in Fig. 1
(which corresponds to one of the strains). Carbonyl cyanide
m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) did not modify their
behavior. When FQ uptake was studied in the three wild-type strains
with higher ciprofloxacin MICs (group A2), we observed the behavior
shown in Fig. 2. FQ uptake increased in
the presence of CCCP.
NorA-mediated quinolone efflux has been extensively studied in
S. aureus. Previous studies have shown that
norA
overexpression
can lead to FQ resistance, both in the presence and in
the absence
of topoisomerase alterations (
4,
5). Quinolone
resistance
due to
norA overexpression was first related to
mutations in the
norA promoter region (
4,
9).
Previous studies suggested
that the thymine-to-adenine mutation in the
norA promoter region
might be responsible for increased
norA transcription (
4,
9),
but
norA
overexpression happens independently of this mutation
(
5),
suggesting that
norA regulation can be located elsewhere
in
the chromosome (
6). Recent studies suggest that this
mutation
might be necessary for constitutively increased
norA expression,
but it is not necessary when overproduction
is inducible (
6).
Efflux-pump mediated quinolone-resistance
has not been described
in
gyrA or
grlA wild-type
clinical strains. Our results show that
efflux-mediated resistance
might be not so infrequent in this
kind of strain. The three
S. aureus strains in group A2 were wild
type for
norA and
its promoter region. Results obtained in this
study suggest that
resistance in these strains is directly related
to efflux. We did not
find any mutation in
gyrA,
gyrB, and
grlA QRDRs and
norA and its promoter region.
grlB mutations have been
described in
S. aureus
only following
gyrA and
grlA mutations
(
14). Moreover, MICs of ciprofloxacin decreased by eightfold
in the three strains when ciprofloxacin was combined with reserpine
(Table
1). One possible explanation is that mutations in areas
other
than the
norA promoter region might be involved in
constitutive
norA overexpression. Nevertheless, since
norA expression has not
been determined, we cannot know
certainly the origin of the efflux
system, and the possibility of
efflux pumps other than NorA cannot
be disregarded. In other species,
such as
Pseudomonas aeruginosa,
the presence of several
efflux systems able to efflux quinolones
with different levels of
efficacy has been described (
7).
In the three strains in group A2, efflux was associated with MICs
similar to those caused by
grlA mutations in the strains
in
group B. Changes were not the same for all of the quinolones
tested
(Table
1). Ciprofloxacin and ofloxacin are hydrophilic
quinolones, and
MICs of these compounds ranged from 0.1 to 0.2
µg/ml in wild-type
strains without efflux activity. MICs of these
FQ against strains with
efflux activity ranged between 1 and 2
µg/ml and reverted to 0.1 to
0.2 µg/ml when tested in presence
of reserpine. MICs of sparfloxacin,
a more hydrophobic compound,
were less affected. MICs ranged between
0.01 and 0.03 µg/ml for
strains without efflux activity, and MICs for
the three strains
with efflux activity were 0.06 µg/ml. MICs for
trovafloxacin remained
very low for all strains. MICs for strains with
efflux activity
were 0.03 µg/ml, while MICs for strains without
efflux activity
were

0.008 µg/ml (four- to eightfold
lower).
These results show that efflux can appear in clinical strains, even in
the absence of mutations in the genes usually involved
in quinolone
resistance, particularly in strains with to MICs
at or above the
breakpoint. The mechanisms controlling this efflux,
and the possibility
that these strains might even increase their
efflux activity in an
inducible way, are now being
studied.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This study was supported in part by a grant from the FIS (Ministry
of Health, Spain) (96/18).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Departamento de
Microbiología, Hospital Universitario de Salamanca, Paseo de
San Vicente 108, 37007 Salamanca, Spain. Phone: 34-923-264825. Fax:
34-923-262261. E-mail: jagarrod{at}gugu.usal.es.
 |
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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, February 1999, p. 354-356, Vol. 43, No. 2
0066-4804/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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