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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, July 2002, p. 2162-2168, Vol. 46, No. 7
0066-4804/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.46.7.2162-2168.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
and Marcelo Galas*
Servicio Antimicrobianos, Departamento de Bacteriología, Instituto Nacional de Enfermedades Infecciosas-ANLIS "Dr. Carlos G. Malbrán," Buenos Aires, Argentina
Received 24 August 2001/ Returned for modification 12 January 2002/ Accepted 7 April 2002
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Some structural genes for CARB enzymes were located on resistance cassettes as part of integrons (18) that so far had been characterized as genetic elements capable of capturing and rearranging resistance genes (24). Integrons from class 1 were already observed in V. cholerae (7, 9). In addition, V. cholerae strains have a large chromosomal region, which acts as an integron-like structure, capturing genes from plasmids or via phages (15). This super integron is restricted to a region of about 10% of V. cholerae chromosome 2 (11) and is characterized by many 123- to 126-bp sequences of imperfect symmetry with a high of identity, named V. cholerae repeats (VCR). VCR flank one single gene or in some cases pair of genes (4). Most of the 216 open reading frames (ORFs) described in the VCR region have not shown homology with any known sequence, and only three appear to be involved in drug resistance (chloramphenicol [CMP] acetyltransferase, fosfomycin resistance protein, and glutathione transferase) (11).
In a previous work, we had performed susceptibility screening by disk diffusion methods of 669 isolates of V. cholerae non-O1, non-O139, which had been received at the National Institute of Infectious Diseases "Dr. C. G. Malbrán" between January 1993 and May 1998. Thirty percent of those isolates presented an AMP-nonsusceptible (resistant plus intermediate categories) phenotype. The analysis of a subset of 131 AMP-nonsusceptible isolates showed that 57% of them produced a ß-lactamase with a pI of 5.4 with high activity against amino- and carboxy-penicillins. For this group, the MICs at which 50 and 90% of isolates tested were inhibited (in micrograms per milliliter) were, respectively, as follows: AMP, 64 and 256, and ticarcillin, 128 and 256. Interestingly, the codifying gene for this ß-lactamase did not belong to the TEM family. Moreover, no PCR products were obtained when specific primers for the CARB-encoding genes were employed (L. Mange, H. Saka, A. Garutti, M. Galas, R. Melano, M. Rapoport, M. Caffer, and A. Rossi, 9th Int. Congr. Infect. Dis., abstr. 95.048, 2000).
In this work we analyzed an isolate belonging to that major group and we determined the nucleotide sequence of a new ß-lactamase, named CARB-7, which in addition seems to be located on the VCR island.
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was used as the host for recombinant plasmids in cloning assays. Plasmids pACYC184, encoding tetracycline and CMP resistance, and pBGS19, encoding kanamycin resistance (23), were used as cloning vectors.
Antimicrobial agents and susceptibility tests. The following antimicrobial agents were used and were obtained as standard laboratory powders from the sources indicated: AMP, Bagó; cefoxitin, Merck Sharp & Dohme; cephalothin, John Wyeth; piperacillin, Richmond; sulbactam, Pfizer; ticarcillin, Schering Plough; clavulanic acid, SmithKline Beecham; nalidixic acid, Winthrop.
MICs were determined by the agar dilution technique under V. cholerae NCCLS specifications (17), adopting the criteria for Enterobacteriaceae for ß-lactam agents other than AMP.
Conjugative assays. Cells of both the donor and recipient strains were mixed on Luria-Bertani agar, and the mixture was incubated for 18 h at 25°C (3) or 35°C, as described previously (20). Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with nalidixic acid (50 µg/ml) and AMP (8 µg/ml) was used to select the transconjugant cells.
DNA manipulations and PCR assays.
Genomic DNA and plasmids were purified by employing the Wizard Genomic DNA Purification Kit and the Wizard Minipreps DNA Purification System (Promega, Madison, Wis.), respectively. The restriction enzymes as well as the DNA ligase were purchased from Gibco BRL (Gaithersburg, Md.). The genomic DNA was partially digested with Sau3AI and ligated with the pACYC184 vector linearized with BamHI. The ligation mixture was electroporated into E. coli DH5
competent cells using the Gene Pulser II Electroporation System (Bio-Rad) according to the manufacturer's recommendations. Selection of recombinant strains was achieved in Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with AMP (16 µg/ml) and CMP (50 µg/ml).
Amplifications were performed with a Biometra thermal cycler in a final volume of 50 µl containing 20 pmol of each primer (Gibco BRL), a 25 µM concentration of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 2.5 U of Taq polymerase (Promega), and 1 µl of DNA of ME11762 as the template. After a denaturation step of 10 min at 94°C, the amplifications were performed over 25 cycles, each one of which consisted of 30 s of denaturation at 94°C, 45 s of annealing at 60°C, and 30 s of extension at 72°C, with a final extension step of 5 min at 72°C. Seminested PCR was performed under the same conditions, using forward PD (5'-CTCTGATGCATGCCTTGCTACT-3') and reverse P3+ (5'-GCCTTATCAACGCGACTGTGAT-3') primers in the first round of amplification and forward PD and reverse P2+ (5'-GGCGTTGTCGTATCCCTCAAAT-3') primers in the second round. One microliter of amplimers obtained in the first round was employed as the template for the second round.
DNA sequencing and sequence analysis. DNA sequencing was performed on both strands by the method of Sanger et al. (22), using the BigDye terminator methodology (Applied Biosystem/Perkin-Elmer, Foster City, Calif.) with universal (M13/pUC forward and reverse 23-base sequencing primers) and sequence-based primers which, besides P2+, P3+, and PD, consisted of the following: P1, 5'-GGGCAACCCGTATTGAGATCACA-3'; P2-, 5'-GCCTGCATTGGTCAGTTCATAGGT-3'; P3-, 5'-CCGAGGCTTCAATGGCAGAA-3'; and P4, 5'-TGCGCGAGGTTAGTGTTGTTG-3'. The sequences were analyzed in an ABI Prism 377 DNA sequencer (Applied Biosystem/Perkin-Elmer). Multiple nucleotide and protein sequence alignments were performed with the CLUSTAL facilities of the PCGENE software package (Intelligenetics, Inc.).
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The CARB-7 ß-lactamase sequence has been submitted to GenBank. Its accession number is AF409092
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Conjugational transfer of resistance. To analyze the mobility of the AMP resistance determinant, the ME11762 isolate was mated with nalidixic acid-resistant E. coli ER1793. After several attempts, including assays performed at 25 or 37°C, no transconjugants were obtained.
Cloning and sequencing of blaCARB-7 gene.
A Sau3AI-based library of the ME11762 isolate was prepared as indicated in Materials and Methods. E. coli DH5
electrotransformants harboring recombinant plasmids were screened on selective agar containing AMP plus CMP. Plasmids from several AMP- and CMP-resistant colonies were analyzed, and the one with the smallest insert (approximately 2.2 kb), named pGMPS1, was subjected to restriction analysis (Fig. 1A).
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FIG. 1. Strategy used for sequencing the blaCARB-7 gene and the DNA flanking regions. (A) Restriction map of the Sau3AI fragment from the ME11762 strain (black box). Only the ending Sau3AI sites are indicated. Grey boxes indicate DNA of pACYC184 vector. (B) The insert of pGMPS1 was liberated by digestion with SalI and EcoRV and was subcloned into SmaI-SalI sites of pBGS19 vector (white boxes), rendering pGMPS2; grey boxes represent approximately 500 bp that belong to pACYC184 vector. Inserts of plasmids derived of pGMPS2 were sequenced. (C) blaCARB-7 gene and its flanking DNA regions. The sense, length, and primers used for each sequence reaction are indicated by the black arrows. The grey box represents the blaCARB-7 gene, the white arrow represent its translational orientation, the flanking fragments are depicted as hatched boxes, and VCR are depicted as open boxes. Restriction sites used for subcloning into pBGS19 vector are indicated. Pf and Pr, universal primers (forward and reverse, respectively).
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FIG. 2. Nucleotide sequence of the 2,214-bp fragment of pGMPS2 containing the CARB-7 ß-lactamase coding region. The deduced amino acid sequence of the ORF proposed to encode CARB-7 ß-lactamase is represented in one-letter code. VCR on the flanking sequences of blaCARB-7 gene are underlined. The fragment showing high homology with the V. cholerae chromosome is indicated by the grey box (GenBank accession number AE004376 [nucleotides 7944 to 8706]). Restriction sites used for subcloning of blaCARB-7 gene are double underlined.
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FIG. 3. Alignment of the deduced amino acid sequence of CARB-7 with those of the closely related class A ß-lactamases PSE-4 (CARB-1), PSE-1 (CARB-2), CARB-3, CARB-4, P. mirabilis N29, and CARB-6. The shadowed boxes (I to VII) correspond to amino acid boxes conserved in all penicillin-recognizing enzymes (12). The arrow indicates amino acid position 139, with the change G D. Asterisks indicate identical residues. Dots indicate conserved amino acids. Sequences are numbered as described by Ambler et al. (1).
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TABLE 1. Amino acid identity of CARB-7 with several related class A ß-lactamases
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FIG. 4. Nucleotide sequence of the 123-bp element. (A) Multiple alignment of nucleotide sequence of the three VCR found on the flanking regions of the blaCARB-7 gene with a proposed VCR consensus sequence (4). Identical bases are indicated by an asterisk. The alignment was generated with the multiple-alignment program CLUSTAL. (B) Proposed secondary structure for each VCR sequence, determined with DNASIS software (version 2.5).
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Despite the fact that both the nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences for CARB-7 showed high similarity with the those of the CARB enzymes, two relevant differences must be pointed out. First, as could be expected from having the lowest overall similarity percentage observed with other CARB genes, there is a poor homology between the blaCARB-7 gene and the reverse specific primer (OC-2) reported by Arlet and Philippon (2) for the identification of members of the blaCARB gene family. This fact can explain the lack of amplification in the PCR assays carried out in our preliminary work for the molecular identification of ß-lactamases (Mange et al., 9th ICID). It points out the need to design new primers that can detect this new member of the CARB family. Second, the CARB group includes enzymes belonging to the molecular class A ß-lactamases, for which several conserved residues or motifs have been identified. Comparing these conserved motifs on the deduced sequence for CARB-7 with those of ß-lactamases from the major families classified into class A, such as TEM, SHV, CARB, CTX-M, and PER enzymes, we observed a change, Gly to Asp, at position 144 (Ambler classification scheme) of the CARB-7 enzyme. This is, to our knowledge, the first report of this amino acidic variant. It would be located far from the active site, as can be inferred from the crystallographic structure reported for the TEM-1 ß-lactamase (25). The strong activity against amino- and carboxy-penicillins displayed by CARB-7 appears to support the assumption that Asp144 is not involved in the enzymatic activity. Strikingly, the two Gly residues at positions 143 and 144 are highly conserved among the Ambler class A enzymes. Therefore, this nonconservative change of a nonpolar residue to an acidic one at position 144 of CARB-7 could imply a conformational change in the secondary structure of the enzyme, which could additionally have evolutionary significance.
Although initially the CARB enzymes were assumed to be confined to P. aeruginosa strains (10), some of these ß-lactamases were isolated from enterobacteria (16), Alcaligenes xylosoxidans (CARB-2) (13), and from an isolate of V. cholerae non-O1, non-O139 (CARB-6) (5). In this study, CARB-7 was isolated from a V. cholerae non-O1, non-O139 strain from a sample of 77 AMP-resistant isolates that were producers of a ß-lactamase with a pI of 5.4. The blaCARB-7 gene was not transferred to the E. coli ER1793 strain, regardless of the fact that several attempts employing different mating temperatures were made. This fact was previously reported for others CARB enzymes (5) and could be interpreted as either a location of the CARB gene on a nonconjugative plasmid or on the chromosome. This last possibility is strongly supported by two facts. First, three 123-bp repeats were detected on the flanking sequence of the blaCARB-7 gene showing a 97% overall similarity with the consensus sequence for VCR (4), which are restricted to a region of about 10% of V. cholerae's chromosome 2 (11). Second, the upstream fragment of the blaCARB-7 gene shared 93% identity with locus VCA0424 (The Institute for Genomic Research), situated inside section 33 of V. cholerae's chromosome 2. The assumption of a chromosomal location for the blaCARB-7 gene supports the notion that the VCR island functions as a "mega-integron." To date, only in vitro works have demonstrated that intl4 V. cholerae integrase is active for site-specific cassette recombination (21), without in vivo proof of gene capture. Therefore, this would be the first evidence of in vivo capture of a gene by this system.
All the VCR-associated genes described to date are transcribed from promoter sequences located immediately upstream of the ORFs (C. Clark, L. Purins, P. Kaewrakon, and P. Manning, Letter, Mol. Microbiol. 26:1137-1138, 1997). However, putative ribosome-binding site or promoter regions (regarding E. coli consensus sequences) were not found in the upstream region of the blaCARB-7 gene. These facts suggest that the transcription may occur through a promoter located more distantly of the blaCARB-7 gene.
Most of the 216 ORFs situated on the VCR island have no homology to other sequences, although three genes were identified that may be involved in resistance to drugs other than ß-lactam antibiotics (11). Therefore, this is the first report of a ß-lactamase within the VCR region.
Dedicated to the memory of our dear Ali. ![]()
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