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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, October 2001, p. 2961-2964, Vol. 45, No. 10
Eijkman-Winkler Institute, University Medical
Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands
Received 18 December 2000/Returned for modification 27 April
2001/Accepted 25 June 2001
An increase in multiresistant Enterobacteriaceae was
observed at one of the departments of the University Medical Center
Utrecht. Nine different integrons and 17 gene cassettes were found,
including the new gene cassette aadA8. This cassette was
highly related to aadA3 and aadA2. In addition,
an unknown promoter sequence was found for two integrons.
In gram-negative bacteria and
especially among Enterobacteriaceae, class 1 integrons are
involved in antibiotic resistance (2, 4, 7, 10, 11). Hall
and Collis (3) defined integrons as elements that contain
the genetic determinants of the components of a site-specific
recombination system that recognizes and captures mobile gene
cassettes. Gene cassettes in class I integrons are composed of a single
coding sequence and a so-called 59-base element, which is involved in
the mobility of the gene cassettes. Most gene cassettes lack a
promoter, and expression is dependent on two potential promoters called
P1 and P2, which may differ in sequence and strength in different
integrons (5). More than 60 gene cassettes have been
described (1).
During 1995-1996 an increase of multiresistant
Enterobacteriaceae was observed at the neurology and
neurosurgery department of the University Medical Center Utrecht.
Characterization of the increase demonstrated the involvement of class
1 integrons as determined using conserved segment PCR (CS-PCR)
(6). Thirty-five of a total of 68 multiresistant
Enterobacteriaceae (51%) yielded at least one PCR product.
At least 11 different PCR products were obtained. DNA sequencing, using
the Big Dye Terminator Cycle Sequencing kit (PE Applied Biosystems,
Gouda, The Netherlands) and an Applied Biosystems ABI 377 sequencer as
described by the manufacturers, showed that two CS-PCR amplification
products had no homology with integrons and were considered artifacts.
The nine other products analyzed revealed homology with known integrons
and gene cassettes (Table 1). The
majority of the gene cassettes found have been described before
(6, 9) or were presented in GenBank. The aadA8
gene cassette has not been described before.
0066-4804/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.45.10.2961-2964.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Novel Gene Cassettes and Integrons
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TABLE 1.
Characteristics of the CS-PCR products and integrons and
GenBank accession numbers of the gene cassettes and highly related
gene cassettes
The oxa2 gene has been described before by Stokes et al. as being in an integron carrying two copies of the gene (12). However, our analysis of the published sequences showed that the oxa2 genes differ by three consecutive base pairs. The first gene in the integron is now called oxa2a and the second is called oxa2b (R. M. Hall, personal communication). The gene cassette found here was identical to oxa2a.
The ereA2 gene was nearly identical to the gene in GenBank, but the differences with the ereA1 sequence were larger and resulted in significant differences in the EreA1 N terminus, which is 62 amino acids shorter than the EreA2 N terminus. In addition, the next six amino acids were different. A single nucleotide deletion in the sequence of ereA1 is largely responsible for this large difference. It can be debated whether the difference is either the result of evolution or a sequencing error. Despite the difference in amino acid sequence, putative promoter and ribosome binding sites in front of both coding sequences have been identified, suggesting that the ereA gene cassettes can be transcribed from its own promoter sequences, but this does not exclude transcription from the promoters in the 5'-CS region.
The sequences of orf9/10 have been described as part of an integron on pACM1, and a comparison showed a one-nucleotide difference with the sequences labeled orfA and orfB (8). Seven nucleotide differences are observed in comparison with the orfX sequences. The most important difference was a deletion of one nucleotide in the orfX sequence. This deletion led to a different and longer C-terminal end for the putative product of the first open reading frame. The other nucleotide differences were observed between the orf10 and orfX sequences, all of them located downstream from the stop codon. A putative GTTRRcY consensus sequence for the end of the attC site of orf9 could not be identified unambiguously. Also, the RYYYAAC consensus sequence for the start of the 59-base element of orf10 could not be identified unambiguously. Since both open reading frames have been described only together, the possibility exists that orf9 lacks an attC site or that this element is not functional.
The aadA8 gene cassette was 956 nucleotides long, including
a 60-nucleotide 59-base element, and encoded a 262-amino-acid adenylyltransferase. Comparison of the sequence with those of the
aadA1a, aadA1b, and aadA2-aadA7 genes showed that
it was closely related to aadA3 and aadA2 (Fig.
1) and may have arisen by a recombination of those genes. Direct sequence comparison of the aadA8 gene
cassette with its close relatives showed only 20 nucleotide changes
when compared to the closely related aadA3 gene. These
differences gave rise to 11 differences in the amino acid sequences
specified by the genes. A few additional differences were observed when the aadA8 gene was compared with the aadA2 gene,
especially in the C-terminal part. Differences with other
aadA genes were distributed across the sequences. The
attC site of the aadA1a gene had the same
attC site sequence as both the aadA8 and
aadA3 genes, whereas the attC site of the
aadA1b gene, which was more closely related to the
aadA1a gene, differed by five nucleotides from the
attC site of aadA8 and aadA3.
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Analysis of the promoter regions of the nine integrons showed that five
different P1 promoter sequences were present, but nucleotide 16, which was either a C or a G, most likely does not influence the
activity of the promoter, because it is outside the consensus
35 and
10 sequences. The P1 sequence for integron VI could not fully be
resolved, because two variants were present. Part of the P1 sequences,
which were obtained from a single isolate, had T and G mutations
compared to the rest of the P1 sequences, which had a G and a C at
these positions, respectively. Seven of the 10 P1 promoter sequences
for the integrons described here were weak promoters, and 1 promoter
was a strong promoter, whereas 2 promoters have not been described
before and their levels of activity are
unknown (Fig. 2). The P2 promoter regions were identical among
the nine integrons with the exception of the promoters for integron I
and V, which were separated by 17 nucleotide sequences instead of 14 nucleotide sequences. Only the first P2 promoter sequences with 17 nucleotide sequences are active (5).
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The detection of at least nine different integrons, one new gene cassette, and two unknown integron promoters isolated from multiresistant Enterobacteriaceae from a single specialty (neurology and neurosurgery) at our hospital demonstrates once more the wide distribution of these genetic elements and their potential to contribute to antibiotic resistance.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address; Eijkman-Winkler Institute, University Medical Center Utrecht, Room G04.614, P.O. Box 85500, 3508 GA Utrecht, The Netherlands. Phone: 31302507630. Fax: 31302541770. E-mail: A.C.Fluit{at}lab.azu.nl.
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REFERENCES |
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