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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, April 1999, p. 769-776, Vol. 43, No. 4
0066-4804/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Cloning, Sequence Analyses, Expression, and
Distribution of ampC-ampR from Morganella
morganii Clinical Isolates
Laurent
Poirel,1
Michele
Guibert,2
Delphine
Girlich,1
Thierry
Naas,2 and
Patrice
Nordmann1,*
Service de Bactériologie-Virologie,
Hôpital de Bicêtre, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de
Paris, Faculté de Médecine Paris-Sud, 94275 Le
Kremlin-Bicêtre,1 and Service de
Bactériologie-Virologie, Hôpital Antoine
Béclère, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris,
Faculté de Médecine Paris-Sud, 92141 Clamart,2 France
Received 13 May 1998/Returned for modification 13 October
1998/Accepted 20 January 1999
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ABSTRACT |
Shotgun cloning experiments with restriction enzyme-digested
genomic DNA from Morganella morganii 1, which expresses
high levels of cephalosporinase, into the pBKCMV cloning vector gave a
recombinant plasmid, pPON-1, which encoded four entire genes: ampC, ampR, an hybF family gene,
and orf-1 of unknown function. The deduced AmpC
-lactamase of pI 7.6 shared structural and functional homologies
with AmpC from Citrobacter freundii, Escherichia
coli, Yersinia enterocolitica, Enterobacter
cloacae, and Serratia marcescens. The overlapping
promoter organization of ampC and ampR,
although much shorter in M. morganii than in the other
enterobacterial species, suggested similar AmpR regulatory properties.
The MICs of
-lactams for E. coli MC4100
(ampC mutant) harboring recombinant plasmid pACYC184
containing either ampC and ampR (pAC-1) or
ampC (pAC-2) and induction experiments showed that the
ampC gene of M. morganii 1 was repressed in the
presence of ampR and was activated when a
-lactam
inducer was added. Moreover, transformation of M. morganii
1 or of E. coli JRG582 (
ampDE) harboring
ampC and ampR with a recombinant plasmid
containing ampD from E. cloacae resulted in a
decrease in the
-lactam MICs and an inducible phenotype for M. morganii 1, thus underlining the role of an AmpD-like protein in
the regulation of the M. morganii cephalosporinase. Fifteen other M. morganii clinical isolates with phenotypes of
either low-level inducible cephalosporinase expression or high-level constitutive cephalosporinase expression harbored the same
ampC-ampR organization, with the hybF and
orf-1 genes surrounding them; the organization of these
genes thus differed from those of ampC-ampR genes in
C. freundii and E. cloacae, which are located
downstream from the fumarate operon. Finally, an identical AmpC
-lactamase (DHA-1) was recently identified as being plasmid encoded
in Salmonella enteritidis, and this is confirmatory
evidence of a chromosomal origin of the plasmid-mediated cephalosporinases.
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INTRODUCTION |
Species of the family
Enterobacteriaceae including Citrobacter
freundii, Enterobacter cloacae, Morganella
morganii, Serratia marcescens, and Yersinia
enterocolitica are naturally resistant to aminopenicillins and the
early cephalosporins. This resistance phenotype is mediated by
chromosomally encoded
-lactamases (AmpC) belonging to class C
enzymes, also commonly named cephalosporinases (2, 5, 6).
The inducible biosynthesis of these cephalosporinases has been reported
phenotypically for these bacterial species. In C. freundii
and E. cloacae, an ampR gene is located upstream of ampC and is divergently transcribed compared to
ampC. Its deduced protein, a transcriptional regulator of
the LysR family, acts as a repressor in the basal level of AmpC
biosynthesis and favors its biosynthesis upon induction by several
-lactams (5). In these enterobacterial species, mutations
in the promoter or the structural gene of ampD result in
constitutive overproduction of cephalosporinase and explain the
acquired resistance to expanded-spectrum cephalosporins (5, 11,
12, 17).
The mechanism of cephalosporinase expression has been studied in detail
for E. cloacae and was found to be related to peptidoglycan components (13). Briefly, during normal growth in the
absence of
-lactam as an inducer, the AmpR regulator is maintained
in an inactive form by a peptidoglycan precursor, uridine
pyrophosphoryl-N-acetyl muramyl-L-alanyl-D-glutamyl-meso-diaminopimelic
acid-D-alanyl-D-alanine (UDP-MurNac-pentapeptide). This negative effect occurs by direct binding of UDP-MurNac-pentapeptide to the regulator. In this inactive form, AmpR binds to its operator site between the ampC and
ampR structural genes, leading to repression of
ampC expression. This inactivation of AmpR can be relieved
by both knockout mutations in the ampD gene or the presence
of
-lactams. Inactivation of ampD which encodes a
cytosolic amidase specific for the recycling of muropeptides
results in an increase in the concentration of its substrate, the
1,6-anhydro-N-acetyl-muramyl-L-alanyl-D-glutamyl-meso-diaminopimelic acid (anh-MurNac-tripeptide).
The higher concentration of this muropeptide inside the cell is
sufficient to displace the UDP-MurNac-pentapeptide from its AmpR
binding site, thereby reactivating AmpR. In
ampD+ cells, addition of
-lactams
results in increased biosynthesis of cell wall degradation
fragments and in a higher intracellular level of
anh-MurNac-tripeptide by titrating the available AmpD activity. More recently, other muropeptides have been recognized as a signal for
-lactamase induction, such as
anh-MurNac-pentapeptide (31).
As for other cephalosporinase-producing enterobacterial species,
M. morganii strains may be grouped into two
-lactamase expression phenotypes, i.e.,
oxyimino-cephalosporin sensitive, with low-level and inducible
cephalosporinase production on the one hand, and oxyimino-cephalosporin
resistant, with high-level and constitutive cephalosporinase production
on the other hand (32). While this work was in progress, the
sequence of the cephalosporinase gene from an M. morganii isolate, strain SLM01, was reported along with
the sequence of part of an ampR gene, but no
evidence of a linkage between the presence of ampR and
cephalosporinase regulation was reported (3). The purpose of
our work was to identify ampR and ampC genes from
an M. morganii isolate and correlate their presence with the
regulatory properties of AmpR. The putative role of an AmpD-like
protein was also investigated. A comparison with the plasmid-mediated
ampC-ampR genes recently found in Salmonella enteritidis was also performed (4). Moreover, a
comparison of ampR, ampC, and the surrounding
sequences in M. morganii with those of other
ampC-possessing enterobacterial species was undertaken.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial strains and plasmid.
M. morganii 1 was
isolated at the Hôpital Antoine Béclère (Clamart,
France) in 1997 from a clinical specimen (dermatous ulcer) and was
identified with the API 20E system (bioMérieux, Marcy l'Etoile).
The other unrelated M. morganii clinical isolates (strains 2 to 16) were identified from patient specimens in 1997 at the
Hôpital de Bicêtre (Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France).
Escherichia coli DH10B (Life Technologies, Eragny, France)
was used as the host strain for cloning experiments.
-Lactamase
expression was studied by using E. coli MC4100 lacking an
ampC gene or E. coli JRG582 from which its
ampDE genes were deleted (12). The cloning vectors were either the pBKCMV phagemid (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.),
which confers kanamycin resistance, or pACYC184, which confers
chloramphenicol and tetracycline resistance (7). Plasmid pNH5 containing an HpaI fragment with the ampD
gene from E. cloacae into pBGS18 conferred kanamycin
resistance (12).
Antimicrobial agents and MIC determinations.
The agents and
their sources were as follows: amoxicillin, clavulanic acid, and
ticarcillin, SmithKline French-Beecham (Nanterre, France); aztreonam
and cefepime, Bristol-Myers Squibb (Paris, France); ceftazidime, Glaxo
(Paris, France); cephalothin, cefamandole, and moxalactam, Eli Lilly
(Saint-Cloud, France); piperacillin and tazobactam, Lederle (Oullins,
France); cefotaxime and cefpirome, Hoechst-Roussel (Paris, France);
cefoxitin and imipenem, Merck Sharp & Dohme-Chibret (Paris, France);
ceftriaxone (Roche, Neuilly, France); and kanamycin and
chloramphenicol, Sigma (Saint-Quentin Falavier, France).
Antibiogram for the M. morganii clinical isolates and the
recombinant E. coli strains were first done by a routine
agar disk diffusion assay with Mueller-Hinton agar plates and
antibiotic-containing disks (Sanofi Diagnostics Pasteur,
Marnes-la-Coquette, France). The MICs were then determined by an agar
dilution technique on Mueller-Hinton agar plates with a Steers multiple
inoculator and an inoculum of 104 CFU per spot
(26). All plates were incubated at 37°C for 18 h.
Genetic techniques.
Genomic DNAs of M. morganii 1 to 16 were extracted as described previously (24). Fragments
of genomic DNA from M. morganii 1 partially digested with
Sau3AI (Pharmacia Biotech, Orsay, France) were ligated into
the BamHI site of the pBKCMV phagemid. Ligation was
performed at a 1:1 vector-insert ratio at a final concentration of 200 ng of DNA in a ligation mixture containing 1 U of T4 DNA ligase
(Boehringer, Meylan, France) at 4°C for 18 h. Recombinant plasmids were transformed by electroporation (gene pulser II; Bio-Rad,
Ivry-sur-Seine, France) into electrocompetent E. coli DH10B
cells (Bio-Rad). Antibiotic-resistant colonies were selected on
Trypticase soy agar plates containing 50 µg of amoxicillin per ml and
30 µg of kanamycin per ml.
Recombinant plasmid DNA was obtained from 100-ml Trypticase soy broth
cultures grown with amoxicillin (100 µg/ml) overnight at 37°C. The
plasmid DNA was prepared with Qiagen columns (Qiagen, Courtaboeuf,
France). Fragments sizes were estimated according to those on 1-kb DNA
ladder (Pharmacia), which was used as a molecular size standard. A
5.9-kb cloned DNA fragment from pPON-1 (see Results section) was
sequenced from both strands by using laboratory-designed successive
primers and an Applied Biosystems sequencer (ABI 311). The nucleotide
sequence and the deduced protein sequence were analyzed with Pedro's
biomolecular tools (29). Multiple sequence alignment of
deduced peptide sequences was carried out with the GCG program Pileup,
which uses a simplification of the progressive alignment method of Feng
and Doolittle (9). The deduced AmpC and AmpR proteins were
compared with the corresponding proteins of the enterobacterial species
possessing known ampC and/or ampR genes: E. coli (14), C. freundii (16),
E. cloacae (11), S. marcescens
(25), and Y. enterocolitica (28).
DNA-DNA hybridizations were performed as described by Maniatis et al.
(
19). Genomic DNA from
M. morganii 1 was digested
with either
EcoRI,
EcoRV, or
PstI. The
products of these digestions
were separated on a 0.8% agarose gel
prior to a Southern transfer
onto an N
+ Hybond nylon
membrane (Amersham) followed by UV light cross-linking.
The membranes
were incubated for 1 h at 42°C in a prehybridization
solution
made of 100 µg of salmon sperm DNA per ml, 5× Denhardt's
solution,
0.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 3× SSC (1× SSC is 0.15
M NaCl plus
0.015 M sodium citrate), and 30% formamide. The DNA
probe used
consisted of the 385-bp
SacI-
BssHII fragment from
recombinant
plasmid pPON-1 containing an internal part of the
ampC gene. The
probe was radiolabelled with
[

-
32P]dATP with a random-primer DNA labelling kit
(Boehringer). Hybridization
was revealed by autoradiography with Kodak
films after exposure
at

80°C for 18
h.
Comparison of the ampC-ampR-coding regions and of the
surrounding sequences in the different expression phenotypes.
By
using the DNA sequences obtained from the recombinant plasmid pPON-1
(Fig. 1), sets of primers were desigted
to PCR amplify from M. morganii isolates of both inducible
and noninducible phenotypes either the hybF,
ampR, and ampC genes (primer 1 [5'-TGAGTGCGGCGGACATTATC-3'] and primer 4 [5'-GGCTTTGACTCTTTCGGTATTC-3']), the ampR and
ampC genes (primer 2 [5'-GTTTCCGTACGGGACTGTAAC-3'],
and primer 4), the ampC gene alone (primer 3 [5'-TTCTGCCGCTGATAATGTCGC-3'] and primer 4), or the
ampC gene and orf-1 (primer 3 and primer 5 [5'-ACCACCACAAAGCGCGAGTC-3']) (Fig.
2). Recombinant plasmids pAC-1 and pAC-2
were obtained by cloning PCR-amplified fragments (primers 1 and 6 and
primers 2 and 6, respectively [primer 6, 5'-CCATAAAACAGCCCATAAAGC-3']) into the EcoRV
site of pACYC184. pAC-1 contained the ampR and
ampC genes, and pAC-2 contained only the ampC
gene (Fig. 1 and 2). E. coli MC4100 was transformed with
pAC-1 and pAC-2, E. coli JRG582 was transformed with pAC-1
with or without pNH5, and M. morganii 1 was transformed with
pNH5 by the calcium chloride method as described elsewhere
(19).

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FIG. 1.
Restriction endonuclease maps of the inserts from
recombinant plasmid pPON-1, which codes for the ampR and
ampC genes from M. morganii 1, and of pAC-1
(ampR, ampC) and pAC-2 (ampC) pACYC184
derivatives. The thick lines represent the cloned inserts from M. morganii 1, the thin lines indicate vector pBKCMV, and the dotted
lines represent vector pACYC184. The five ORFs found in the 5,914-bp
sequenced are indicated, as are their translation directions.
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FIG. 2.
Map of pPON-1 insert from M. morganii 1 and
the primers used to PCR amplify the indicated genes from 15 M. morganii clinical isolates: primers 1 and 4 for hybF,
ampR, and ampC; primers 2 and 4 for
ampR and ampC; primers 3 and 4 for
ampC; and primers 3 and 5 for ampC and
orf-1. Cloning of ampR-ampC genes or of the
ampC gene into pACYC184, giving recombinant plasmids pAC-1
or pAC-2, respectively, used similarly PCR-amplified fragments.
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-Lactamase assays.
Cultures of E. coli
harboring the pPON-1 recombinant plasmid and M. morganii 1 were grown overnight at 37°C in 200 ml of Trypticase soy broth with
amoxicillin at 100 µg/ml. After low-speed centrifugation, the
bacterial pellet was resuspended prior to sonification (two times for
30 s each time at 20 Hz; phospholyser Vibra Cell 300; Bioblock,
Illkirch, France) and subsequent high-speed centrifugation (twice, 30 min, 48,000 × g, 4°C). The residual nucleic acids in the supernatant were precipitated by treatment with 7% (vol/vol) spermin (0.2 M; Sigma) for 2 h at 4°C. This suspension was
ultracentrifuged at 100,000 × g for 1 h at 4°C.
The supernatants containing the crude enzyme extracts were subjected to
isoelectric focusing.
The

-lactamase activity of
E. coli DH10B cultures
harboring pPON-1 was assayed by UV spectrophotometry (spectrophotometer
Ultrospec 2000; Pharmacia Biotech, Orsay, France) at 30°C in 100
mM
phosphate buffer (pH 7.0). The antibiotic wavelengths were
chosen as
described previously by Matagne et al. (
20). Antibiotic
solutions were freshly prepared in 100 mM phosphate buffer (pH
7.0).
Kinetic parameters were derived from the initial velocity
obtained with
four to six substrate concentrations.
Km values
were determined according to the Eadie-Hofstee representation
[
V =
f(
Vi/
S), where
Vi is the
initial velocity and
S is the substrate
concentration].
Vmax values were expressed relative to that of
benzylpenicillin, which was set equal to 100. Enzyme inhibition
was
studied with cephalothin (100 µM) as the substrate. Clavulanic
acid
and tazobactam, at various concentrations, were preincubated
with
enzyme for 3 min at 30°C before addition of the
substrate.
Analytical isoelectric focusing was performed with a mini IEF 111 (Bio-Rad) with a pH gradient of 3.5 to 9.5 ampholine polyacrylamide
gel
according to the manufacturer's instructions. The focused

-lactamases were detected by overlaying the gel with 1 mM nitrocefin
(Oxoid, Paris, France) in distilled water. The pI values were
determined and compared to those from molecular standards and
to those
of known

-lactamases (
26).

-Lactamase basal level determination and induction assays were
performed as suggested previously (
32) with
M. morganii 1 to 16 and
E. coli MC4100 harboring either
recombinant plasmid
pAC-1 or pAC-2 (see Results section). Briefly,
overnight cultures
were diluted 1:10 and were grown for 1 h and 30 min in a preincubated
Trypticase soy broth on a rotating shaker at
37°C. Then, the cultures
were grown for an additional 2 h in the
presence of an inducer.
Imipenem (0.5 µg/ml) was used as the inducer
since this

-lactam
was reported to be the most powerful
cephalosporinase inducer
for
M. morganii (
32),
and cefoxitin (4 µg/ml) was used for the
induction of
E. coli MC4100 with recombinant plasmids. One unit
of enzyme activity
was defined as the activity which hydrolyzed
1 µmol of cephalothin
per min. The total protein content was measured
with bovine albumin as
the standard (Bio-Rad DC Protein assay
kit).
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The nucleotide
sequence data reported in this paper will appear in the Genbank/EMBL
nucleotide databases under the accession no. AF055067.
 |
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
Cloning of the cephalosporinase gene and susceptibility
testing.
Cloning from genomic DNA of M. morganii 1 gave
several recombinant clones containing 5.9- to 12-kb inserts. One of
them, which harbored recombinant plasmid pPON-1 with a 5.9-kb insert,
was retained for further analysis (Fig. 1). MIC determinations showed that M. morganii 1 was resistant to amoxicillin,
cephalothin, ceftazidime, and cefotaxime, of intermediate
susceptibility to ticarcillin and cefoxitin, and fully susceptible to
moxalactam and imipenem (Table 1). This
antibiotic resistance pattern corresponded to that of an M. morganii strain producing high levels of cephalosporinase. As
reported previously (32) and as opposed to other
enterobacterial species which possess a cephalosporinase, such a strain
was, surprisingly, of intermediate susceptibility to ticarcillin and
cefoxitin, despite being resistant to expanded-spectrum cephalosporins.
This strain remained susceptible to cefepime and cefpirome, likely due
to the poor affinity of the M. morganii cephalosporinase for
these
-lactams and/or better intracellular penetration
(27).
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TABLE 1.
MICs of -lactams for clinical isolates M. morganii 1 and 5, E. coli DH10B harboring recombinant
plasmid pPON-1, and the E. coli DH10B reference strain
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E. coli harboring pPON-1 showed a resistance profile similar
to that of
M. morganii 1 except for resistance to cefoxitin
(Table
1). The addition of clavulanic acid did not modify the
resistance
pattern. However, as described for other
M. morganii cephalosporinases
(
1), the addition of
tazobactam decreased the MICs of ticarcillin
and ceftazidime, which is
an uncommon property for cephalosporinases
(Table
1).
Identification of the cephalosporinase.
The entire 5.9-kb
insert from recombinant plasmid pPON-1 was sequenced on both strands
(Fig. 1). Analysis of this insert for coding regions revealed an open
reading frame (ORF) of 1,137 bp encoding a 379-amino-acid protein. This
ORF was preceeded by
35 and a
10 regions consistent with a putative
enterobacterial promoter (Fig. 3). The
overall GC content of this ORF was 51%, which is within the expected
range of the GC contents of enterobacterial genes. Within the deduced
amino acid sequence of the protein, a
serine-valine-phenylalanine-lysine tetrad (S-V-F-K) at positions 67 to
70 was found (Fig. 3); it included the conserved serine and lysine
amino acid residues characteristic of
-lactamases possessing a
serine active site (15). Three structural elements characteristic of class C
-lactamases (cephalosporinases) were found
(21): YAN at positions 150 to 152, DAES at positions 217 to
220, and KTG at positions 314 to 316 (Fig.
4). This enzyme shared 56, 55, 54, 53, and 39% homologies with AmpC from E. coli K-12, C. freundii OS60, E. cloacae MHN-1, Y. enterocolitica IP97, and S. marcescens SR50,
respectively.

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FIG. 3.
Nucleotide sequence of the 2,126-bp fragment of pPON-1
containing the ampC- and ampR-coding regions. The
deduced amino acid sequences are designated in single-letter code. The
putative promoter sequences are represented by 35 and 10 regions
(boxed). The start and stop codons of these genes are underlined.
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FIG. 4.
Comparison of amino acid sequences of AmpC from M. morganii SLM01 and DHA-1 from M. morganii 1. Dotted
lines indicate identical amino acids. The boldface amino acids are
characteristic either of serine -lactamases (S-V-S-K) or of class C
-lactamases.
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Kinetic parameters of the identified

-lactamase (called DHA-1)
revealed that it had strong activity against benzylpenicillin
and
cephalothin but poorly hydrolyzed ceftazidime cefotaxime,
and
ticarcillin (Table
2). Its activity was
strongly inhibited
by tazobactam and was poorly inhibited by clavulanic
acid. Their
50% inhibitory concentrations were 0.6 and >100 µM,
respectively
(28% inhibition for 300 µM clavulanic acid). These
hydrolysis
parameters correlated to those obtained with another
M. morganii isolate described by Yang and Livermore
(
32).
M. morganii 1
produced the same

-lactamase of pI 7.6 as the
E. coli DH10B strain
harboring recombinant plasmid pPON-1 (data not shown).
While this work was in progress, the sequence of an
ampC
gene from an
M. morganii isolate (isolate SLM01) was
published (
3).
It shares 98.9% amino acid identity with
DHA-1 (Fig.
4). The cephalosporinases
of
M. morganii SLM01
and DHA-1 have pI values of 7.4 and 7.6,
respectively. Their sequences
differ at four positions for SLM01
and DHA-1: position 48, isoleucine
versus valine, respectively;
position 84, alanine versus threonine,
respectively; position
90, alanine versus glutamic acid, respectively;
and position 133,
asparagine versus histidine, respectively (Fig.
4).
The first
difference at position 48 is neutral. None of these amino
acid
changes are located within the putative catalytic site, as deduced
from the closely related cephalosporinase from
E. cloacae
(
18).
These changes did not extend the hydrolysis profile of
DHA-1 compared
to that of a previously published cephalosporinase for
another
M. morganii isolate (
3).
Hybridization experiments were then performed with genomic DNA from
M. morganii 1 restricted with either
EcoRI,
EcoRV, or
PstI. These restriction enzymes did not
cut within the
blaDHA-1 internal probe
consisting of the 385-bp
SacI-
BssHII
fragment from
pPON-1 (Fig.
1). Single hybridization bands of various
sizes (7,
3.2, and 9 kb, respectively) were obtained, thus
indicating that
blaDHA-1 is unique in
M. morganii 1 chromosomal DNA, excluding
any
ampC duplication.
Genetic environment of the cephalosporinase gene.
Downstream
from the ampC gene, another ORF (orf-1) of
unknown function was found. An identical orf-1 was found
downstream from ampC in M. morganii SLM01
(3), thus suggesting a conserved position of ampC
in M. morganii species. Upstream from the ampC gene, three ORFs were also found in pPON-1 (Fig. 1). Two of them coded
for HybF and HybE (partial sequence); the two proteins shared sequence homologies with hydrogenase subunits of E. coli,
and HybF shared 66% homology with HybF from E. coli
(23). Their functions in M. morganii have not yet
been studied. Immediately upstream from the ampC gene, an
ampR gene was found, and its deduced protein was 99%
homologous to the partial sequence of AmpR reported from M. morganii SLM01. The ampR gene had an
overlapping and divergently oriented promoter, as described for
other ampC-ampR regulatory systems (Fig.
5) (5). Analysis of the
intercistronic region revealed close similarity with those of the other
ampC-ampR systems of C. freundii, E. cloacae, S. marcescens, and Y. enterocolitica (Fig. 5) (5, 11, 17, 28). Upstream from
the
35 and
10 consensus sequences for the ampC promoter,
a deletion has occurred in M. morganii species compared to
those of the other enterobacterial species. The significance of this
result remains unknown; it is, however, unlikely that it may
significantly influence the effect of AmpR binding, but it may
affect AmpC expression. The deduced AmpR protein of M. morganii 1 shared homology with AmpR proteins of other species:
81, 62, 60, and 48% for E. cloacae MHN-1, C. freundii OS60, Y. enterocolitica IP97, and S. marcescens S50, respectively (25). This homology
was mainly within the N-terminal sequence, where a helix-turn-helix
motif is required for binding to the intercistronic regions between
ampR and ampC (Fig.
6). The homologies among the AmpR
proteins were different from those found for AmpC proteins, although
AmpR and AmpC from S. marcescens SR50 shared the least
homology with both AmpR and AmpC from M. morganii 1.

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FIG. 5.
Alignment of the intercistronic region of
ampC-ampR from M. morganii, C. freundii, Y. enterocolitica, S. marcescens,
and E. cloacae. The start codons and the 35 and 10
regions of the promoters are shown below the DNA sequences for
ampR and above for the DNA sequences for ampC.
The +1 sign indicates the putative mRNA transcription start site. The
sequences marked Region 1 and Region 2 correspond to those conserved
among ampC-ampR intercistronic regions. Region 1 and region
2 are the two components of the putative AmpR binding site. Only region
1 contains a LysR binding motif (T-N11-A).
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FIG. 6.
Multiple-sequence alignment of amino acid sequences of
AmpR regulating cephalosporinase expression. The origins of AmpR are as
follows: M. morganii 1 (Mor str. 1), C. freundii
OS60 (Cit OS60), Y. enterocolitica IP97 (Yer IP97), S. marcescens SR50 (Ser SR50), and E. cloacae MHN-1 (Ent
MHN-1). Identical amino acids are boxed. The predicted helix-turn-helix
DNA-binding motif of the LysR family is shown (HTH).
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Regulation of cephalosporinase expression.
Since pBKCMV is a
multicopy vector (200 to 300 copies), expression of ampC was
studied after its cloning into a plasmid, pACYC184, of lower copy
number (20 to 30 copies). pAC-1 and pAC-2 were obtained by cloning the
PCR-amplified ampC and ampR genes and the
ampC gene, respectively. E. coli MC4100(pAC-1)
had a cephalosporinase inducible phenotype in the presence of cefoxitin
(6.7-fold increase), while E. coli MC4100(pAC-2), which
lacked the ampR gene, showed an increase in its level of
basal cephalosporinase expression (5.8-fold), together with a loss of
inducibility (Table 3). Similarly, the
MICs of the
-lactams were higher for E. coli
MC4100(pAC-2) than for E. coli MC4100(pAC-1), and this was
most noticeable for cefotaxime (Table 4).
Similar results were obtained with the C. freundii and
E. cloacae cephalosporinases, for which ampR
deletion results in an increase in
-lactamase expression (2.4-fold)
and a lack of induction (5, 17). Thus, AmpR seems to act in
M. morganii like it does in other enterobacterial species:
as a negative regulator of cephalosporinase expression in the absence
of a
-lactam inducer and as an activator in the presence of an
inducer.
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
TABLE 3.
-Lactamase activity of M. morganii 1 with
or without pNH5 (ampD of E. cloacae) and E. coli MC4100 harboring either recombinant plasmid pAC-1
(ampR and ampC genes) or
pAC-2 (ampC gene)
|
|
The level of cephalosporinase from
M. morganii 1 indicated
high-level and constitutive expression of this enzyme, as inferred
by
negative results of induction assays (Table
3).
M. morganii 1 might possess mutations either in the promoter of an
ampD-like
gene or within the structural gene. To test this
hypothesis,
M. morganii 1 was transformed with plasmid pNH5
containing an
ampD gene from
E. cloacae. A
decrease in the

-lactam MICs was obtained
(Table
4). Similarly, the

-lactam MICs for
E. coli JRG582 (
ampDE)
harboring the
ampC and
ampR genes from
M. morganii 1 with or without
the same
ampD gene were
lower in the presence of
ampD (Table
4),
and
E. coli JRG582 had an inducible cephalosporinase expression
phenotype. Additionally,
M. morganii 1 transformed
with pNH5 (
ampD gene) recovered inducible
cephalosporinase expression (50-fold
increase) (Table
3). Moreover,
these results indicated that an
AmpD from
E. cloacae may act
in
trans as a regulatory protein
for expression of
M. morganii AmpC in a similar manner as for
the AmpC of
E. cloacae.
Induction experiments and basal cephalosporinase levels divided the 15 other
M. morganii isolates into two groups: those with
low-level (although variable) and inducible expression of
cephalosporinase
and those with high-level and constitutive expression
of cephalosporinase
(Table
5). Detailed
MICs of the

-lactams for
M. morganii 5 (low-level
and
inducible cephalosporinase expression) confirmed these results
(Table
1). Both groups correlated with strains with
oxyiminocephalosporin-susceptible
and -resistant phenotypes,
respectively. The only exception was
M. morganii 16, which
had a relatively high level of cephalosporinase
expression, but it
remained inducible (Table
5). Therefore, it
is likely that
M. morganii strains with high-level and constitutive
cephalosporinase
expression, like
M. morganii 1, corresponded
to those
possessing a nonfunctional AmpD-like protein.
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
TABLE 5.
-Lactamase expression phenotypes and MICs at which
90% of strains are inhibited for selected -lactams for 16 M. morganii clinical strains
|
|
Comparison of the ampC- and ampR-coding
regions and surrounding sequences in M. morganii isolates
with different
-lactamase expression phenotypes.
Using
different pairs of primers designed from the pPON-1 sequence (Fig. 1),
we amplified hybF-ampR, ampC-ampR,
ampC, and ampC-orf-1 DNA fragments from the
genomic DNAs of 15 M. morganii isolates, strains 2 to 16. In
each case, the same fragments expected from the pPON-1 sequence were
obtained, i.e., 2,418 bp for the hybF-ampR-ampC
fragment, 2,043 bp for the ampR-ampC fragment, 1,047 bp for the ampC fragment, and 3,073 bp for the
ampC-hybF fragment. In all M. morganii strains
studied, ampR, orf-1, and hybF were
found at the same locations at which they were found in M. morganii 1, whatever the
-lactamase expression phenotype was.
Compared to other enterobacterial species in which an
ampC gene is found (8). M. morganii
species did not possess a fumarate operon upstream from the
ampC gene (Fig. 7). This
result may infer that M. morganii species are more distantly
related to E. cloacae species and C. freundii
species than the latter two species are to one another. Surprisingly,
HybF shared 53% homology with an ORF, ORFB, of unknown function, with
its gene being located just downstream from the fumarate operon in
Proteus vulgaris, an ampC-negative enterobacterial species. It remained intriguing that HybF is a protein
involved in dihydrogen uptake in E. coli, with its gene being a member of an operon which can be differentially induced to high
levels when cells are grown in medium containing dihydrogen as an
electron donor and fumarate as an electron acceptor (23).

View larger version (8K):
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[in a new window]
|
FIG. 7.
Organization of the sequences surrounding
ampC ampC in various enterobacterial species. The
positions and directions of the fumarate operon (frdABCD),
hybF, hybE, orf-1, ampC,
and ampR genes are indicated with arrows. Also indicated are
the locations of the putative promoters.
|
|
Finally, Barnaud et al. (
4) reported on an inducible
plasmid-mediated cephalosporinase gene along with a functional
ampR gene from
Salmonella enteritidis
(
4). Sequence analysis revealed
that this plasmid-mediated
cephalosporinase was 100% homologous
to DHA-1 (the reason why the same
name was retained), with their
genes differing by only seven base-pair
substitutions (data not
shown). The AmpR sequences were 98% identical
at the DNA level
and 99% identical at the protein level. The
investigators reported
an unusual integron carrying
aadA2,
sulI along with
blaDHA-1,
and
ampR (
30). In this integron, no 59-bp element
typical of
an integron recombination site was located closed to
blaDHA-1 or
ampR (
30).
aadA2 and
sulI were not chromosomally located
around the
ampR-ampC genes in our
M. morganii
strains. In contrast,
the three chromosomally located ORFs found
around
ampR-ampC genes
in
M. morganii
strains were not found to be located on an integron
in
S. enteritidis (
30). Analysis of the DNA sequence located
on each side of the
ampC-ampR sequence in
M. morganii strains
and in the
ampC-ampR-possessing
S. enteritidis strain did not
locate any hot-spot
recombination site, therefore giving no explanation
for the presence of
ampC-ampR within this
integron.
Taken together, the results indicating a plasmid location of
blaDHA-1 in
S. enteritidis and
the results of our work indicate
that almost identical
ampR-ampC operons may be located in either
the chromosome or
the plasmid for different enterobacterial species.
The encoded AmpC
sequences were 100% identical, in contrast to
other reported
plasmid-mediated cephalosporinases, which share
at most 96%
homology with any chromosomal cephalosporinases (
10).
This is therefore confirmatory evidence of the chromosomal origin
of
the plasmid-located cephalosporinases which are now spread
worldwide
(
22).
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank S. T. Cole and N. Honoré for the gift of
E. coli MC4100, E. coli JRG582, and plasmid pNH5
and G. Arlet for sharing unpublished sequence data. We are grateful to
S. Bellais for help in enzymatic determinations.
This work was funded by the Ministère de l'Education Nationale
et de la Recherche (grant JE2227) and a grant-in-aid from Institut
SmithKline-Beecham (La-Défense) of France.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Service de
Bactériologie-Virologie, Hôpital de Bicêtre, 78, rue
du Général Leclerc, 94275 Le Kremlin-Bicêtre cedex,
France. Phone: 33 1 45 21 36 32. Fax: 33 1 45 21 63 40. E-mail:
nordmann.patrice{at}bct.ap-hop-paris.fr.
 |
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Mahlen, S. D., Morrow, S. S., Abdalhamid, B., Hanson, N. D.
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Vimont, S., Poirel, L., Naas, T., Nordmann, P.
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Yan, J.-J., Ko, W.-C., Jung, Y.-C., Chuang, C.-L., Wu, J.-J.
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Bellais, S., Naas, T., Nordmann, P.
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Decousser, J. W., Poirel, L., Nordmann, P.
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Naas, T., Massuard, S., Garnier, F., Nordmann, P.
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Bellais, S., Poirel, L., Fortineau, N., Decousser, J. W., Nordmann, P.
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Poirel, L., Lambert, T., Türkoglü, S., Ronco, E., Gaillard, J.-L., Nordmann, P.
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Bellais, S., Poirel, L., Leotard, S., Naas, T., Nordmann, P.
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Girlich, D., Naas, T., Bellais, S., Poirel, L., Karim, A., Nordmann, P.
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Nordmann, P., Poirel, L., Kubina, M., Casetta, A., Naas, T.
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Bellais, S., Aubert, D., Naas, T., Nordmann, P.
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Girlich, D., Naas, T., Bellais, S., Poirel, L., Karim, A., Nordmann, P.
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Poirel, L., Naas, T., Nicolas, D., Collet, L., Bellais, S., Cavallo, J.-D., Nordmann, P.
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Bellais, S., Poirel, L., Naas, T., Girlich, D., Nordmann, P.
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Verdet, C., Arlet, G., Barnaud, G., Lagrange, P. H., Philippon, A.
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