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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, November 2003, p. 3574-3579, Vol. 47, No. 11
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.11.3574-3579.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Related Clones Containing SCCmec Type IV Predominate among Clinically Significant Staphylococcus epidermidis Isolates
Hilmar Wisplinghoff,1 Adriana E. Rosato,1 Mark C. Enright,2 Michael Noto,1 William Craig,1 and Gordon L. Archer1*
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia,1
Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of Bath, Bath, United Kingdom2
Received 30 April 2003/
Returned for modification 27 July 2003/
Accepted 9 August 2003

ABSTRACT
SCC
mec is a mobile genetic element that carries the gene (
mecA)
mediating methicillin resistance in staphylococci. For
Staphylococcus aureus, four SCC
mec types have been described, one (type IV)
of which has been associated with newly identified community-acquired
methicillin-resistant
S. aureus. However, the distribution of
SCC
mec types among
S. epidermidis is not known. SCC
mec typing
of a collection of 44 methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus epidermidis (MRSE) isolates recovered between 1973 and 1983 from the blood
of patients with prosthetic valve endocarditis (PVE) was performed
by PCR amplification of key genetic elements (
mecA,
mecI, IS
1272,
and
ccrAB). Of the 44 isolates, 1 (2%) harbored SCC
mec type
I, 15 (34%) harbored type II, 12 (28%) harbored type III, and
16 (36%) harbored type IV. The complete nucleotide sequence
of SCC
mec type IV was determined for 16 isolates and found to
be identical in size (24 kb) and 98% homologous to DNA sequences
published for
S. aureus. Type IV SCC
mec was also common (5 of
10 isolates) among a geographically dispersed collection of
10 recent (1998 to 2001)
S. epidermidis bloodstream isolates.
Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) (using the same seven genes
presently employed for
S. aureus MLST) of these MRSE isolates
and of 10 additional recent geographically dispersed methicillin-susceptible
isolates demonstrated that all 16 PVE isolates and 2 of 5 recent
isolates harboring type IV SCC
mec were in three related clonal
groups. All three MSSE PVE isolates recovered from patients
between 1976 and 1979 were in the same clonal groups as type
IV SCC
mec MRSE isolates. These data support the hypothesis of
intra- and interspecies transfer of type IV SCC
mec and suggest
that there are clonal associations in
S. epidermidis that correlate
with SCC
mec type.

INTRODUCTION
Resistance of staphylococci to methicillin and other beta-lactam
antibiotics is mediated by a specific penicillin binding protein
(PBP) that has a reduced affinity for beta-lactam antibiotics
(PBP 2a) (
6,
15,
29). PBP 2a is encoded by the
mecA gene, which
is carried on a chromosomal genetic element designated staphylococcus
chromosomal cassette
mec (SCC
mec). Four types of SCC
mec, differing
in DNA sequences and gene content, have been identified in
Staphylococcus aureus (
18,
19,
21), and the first methicillin-resistant (MR)
S. aureus (MRSA) isolates (isolated in the early 1960s) are
thought to have emerged from an epidemic methicillin-susceptible
(MS)
S. aureus (MSSA) lineage upon acquisition of SCC
mec type
I from coagulase-negative staphylococci (CoNS) (
7,
12).
MRSA isolates recovered from patients who have had little or no contact with hospital-based care have recently been described from the community (1, 13, 14, 16, 23, 24, 26, 28). Most of these isolates have genetic backgrounds similar to those of MSSA isolates present in the community and most have a novel SCCmec type (type IV) rarely found in S. aureus isolates recovered before 1990 (22, 25). Type IV SCCmec is smaller than the SCCmec types previously reported (21 to 24 kb versus 34 to 67 kb) (18, 19, 21). These data suggest that type IV SCCmec is mobile and has been recently acquired by S. aureus, possibly from Staphylococcus epidermidis, the CoNS that is the most common MR species.
This study was performed to assess the degree of similarity of SCCmec between S. epidermidis and S. aureus clinical isolates and to determine whether S. epidermidis is a likely reservoir of this resistance determinant. The clinical S. epidermidis isolates used were recovered from the blood of patients with documented prosthetic valve endocarditis (PVE) diagnosed between 1973 and 1983, before the first reported MRSA isolates shown to carry type IV SCCmec were diagnosed, and from the blood of patients without PVE, as part of a Surveillance and Control of Pathogens of Epidemiologic Importance (SCOPE) study (10). SCOPE collects bacteria isolated from the blood of patients in 52 hospitals representing all geographic regions of the United States. We also performed multilocus sequence typing (MLST) to investigate the distribution of SCCmec types among S. epidermidis genotypes.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains and media.
S. epidermidis isolates used in this study were from two sources.
First, there were 47 isolates collected between 1973 and 1983
from the blood of patients with PVE in Richmond, Va., Boston,
Mass., Birmingham, Ala., and Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada (Table
1). A total of 44 of these isolates were MR and three were MS.
The clinical criteria for PVE and characterization of many of
the infections have been previously published (
5,
20). Second,
there were 20 non-PVE isolates (10 MR and 10 MS) from the blood
of patients with bloodstream infection (BSI), collected through
the SCOPE study (
10,
30). They were classified as true bacteremic
isolates on the basis of previously published criteria (
10).
They were from four different geographic areas in the United
States (the southeast, northeast, northwest, and southwest regions)
and were recovered between 1998 and 2001 (Table
1).
S. aureus strains COL (SCC
mec type I), N315 (SCC
mec type II), ANS46 (SCC
mec type III), and MW2 (SCC
mec type IV) were used as SCC
mec standards.
Brain heart infusion broth and brain heart infusion agar (Becton
Dickinson, Sparks, Md.) were used for cultivation of
S. epidermidis and
S. aureus strains. All strains have been identified to species
level according to NCCLS criteria in the original studies. Identification
of
S. epidermidis was confirmed by demonstrating that the isolates
produced catalase, did not produce coagulase, and could not
use trehalose. Resistance to oxacillin was confirmed when strains
grew on Mueller-Hinton agar plates containing 6 µg of
oxacillin/ml after incubation for 72 h at 30°C.
Determination of SCCmec types.
Genomic DNA of
S. epidermidis strains was extracted with a QIAGEN
plasmid minikit (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany) as recommended by
the manufacturer. SCC
mec types were determined with the use
of specific primers for amplification of the key genetic elements
mecA (primers mecA1 and mecA2),
mecI (primers 214 and 215),
IS
1272 (primers F3 and mA2 and primers F1 and B3), and
ccrA/B (primers

1,

2,

3, and ß2). PCR was performed using
a
Taq PCR MasterMix kit (QIAGEN) with a 50-µl reaction
volume in a MiniCycler thermocycler (MJ Research, Boston, Mass.).
The overall size of SCC
mec was determined (using Expand
Taq [Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany] according to the procedure
recommended by the manufacturer) by long-range PCR with five
sets of overlapping primers (
18,
19,
21). All PCR products were
purified with a QIAquick PCR purification kit (QIAGEN). The
nucleotide sequences of all primers are shown in Table
2 or
were reported previously (
18,
19,
21). Nucleotide sequences
of SCC
mec for all strains designated type IV were established
(utilizing an ABI Prism 377 DNA sequencer [Applied Biosystems,
Foster City, Calif.] with BigDye fluorescent terminators) by
automated sequencing of PCR products obtained with several sets
of overlapping primers. For most isolates the nucleotide sequence
was determined on a single strand. However, for several strains
most of the sequence was confirmed on both strands.
Computer analysis of nucleotide sequences.
All analysis was carried out using Vector NTI suite 7.1 software
for Windows (InforMax, Bethesda, Md.). A homology search was
performed with the BLAST program for the EMBL and GenBank databases.
Sequences were compared to the published sequences of CA05 (JCSC1968)
and 8/6-3P (JCSC1978) (GenBank accession numbers
AB063172 and
AB063173, respectively) (
21).
MLST.
Housekeeping genes were selected on the basis of the published MLST scheme for S. aureus (11). The DNA sequences of the housekeeping genes of S. epidermidis RP62A were from the unpublished genome sequence found on The Institute for Genomic Research website (www.tigr.org). Primers were designed by using the sequences of highly conserved regions flanking more variable regions. Each primer pair amplified an internal fragment of the housekeeping gene (
500 bp) and allowed accurate sequencing of fragments of approximately 450 bp of each gene on both strands. The following seven housekeeping genes were used in the final MLST scheme (the fragments were amplified by using the primers shown in Table 3): carbamate kinase (arcC), shikimate 5-dehydrogenase (aroE), glycerol kinase (glpK), guanylate kinase (gmk), phosphate acetyltransferase (pta), triosephosphate isomerase (tpiA), and acetyl coenzyme A acetyltransferase (yqi). Chromosomal DNA was extracted using a bacterial genomic DNA purification kit (Edge BioSystems, Gaithersburg, Md.) according to the instructions of the manufacturer, with the addition of lysostaphin at a final concentration of 50 µg/ml. For each isolate, the allele at each of the seven loci gave an allelic profile that was used to define its sequence type (ST). Polymorphic sites were displayed by using Sequence Output, a Macintosh program available from the MLST website (http://www.mlst.net). Clonality was assessed using BURST, a web-implemented clustering algorithm designed for use on MLST data sets from bacterial pathogens. Groups with at least five out of seven identical alleles were defined as clonal groups. The program was developed on the basis of the epidemic model of population structure devised by Smith et al. (27) and specifically examines the relationships between very closely related genotypes within clonal complexes, thereby bypassing the difficulties resulting from the frequent recombination that overwhelms the deep-rooted phylogenetic signal (8).

RESULTS
SCCmec typing.
Among the 44
S. epidermidis PVE strains, the SCC
mec types were
as follows: one (2%) was SCC
mec type I, 15 (34%) were type II,
12 (28%) were type III, and 16 (36%) were type IV. Among the
10 SCOPE isolates, 5 (50%) were type IV, 4 (40%) were type III,
and 1 (10%) was type II. Long-range PCR analysis with overlapping
primers of the SCC
mec region of the type IV isolates revealed
a size of 24.2 kb for all strains. No significant variation
in the sizes of the individual PCR products was observed among
strains.
Sequencing.
The entire nucleotide sequence was determined for each SCCmec IV strain. From the left inverted repeat to the right inverted repeat, all elements were 24,248 bp in size. Comparison to the published sequences of S. aureus CA05 (JCSC1968) revealed a homology of 98 to 99%, with no insertions or deletions. Differences were usually single-base mismatches. Most of the sequence was only determined on one strand, but this was felt to be sufficient because of the high homology of the single strand to the published sequence.
MLST.
Seven housekeeping gene fragments (between 411 and 477 bp in size) (Table 3) were sequenced from each of 44 MR S. epidermidis (MRSE) isolates from patients with PVE (isolated from 1973 to 1983), three MSSE isolates were sequenced from isolates from patients with PVE (isolated in 1976, 1979, and 1979), 10 MRSE isolates were sequenced from isolates from patients with confirmed BSI (isolated for the SCOPE study [1998 to 2001]) and 10 MSSE isolates were sequenced from isolates from patients with confirmed BSI (SCOPE, 1998 to 2001). For each isolate, the sequences obtained at each of the seven loci were compared with those of every other isolate and the alleles were numbered consecutively. Sequences were assigned as distinct alleles even when they differed at a single nucleotide. No weighting was applied to reflect the number of nucleotide differences between alleles. Between 5 (yqi) and 10 (arcC) alleles were present at each locus (Table 4), with a mean of 8.1 alleles per locus, which allowed 32 STs to be distinguished. Most of the S. epidermidis genes were relatively uniform, with the number of polymorphic (variable) nucleotide sites at the seven loci ranging between 10 in tpiA and 34 in glpK (Fig. 1).
Association of MLST and SCCmec.
Figure
2 shows the clonal associations (derived from the matrix
of pair-wise differences between the allelic profiles) of the
67 isolates, as depicted using the BURST program (
www.mlst.net).
A total of 52 of the 54 MRSE isolates clustered into three related
clonal groups. In addition, the three MSSEs isolated in the
1970s had STs that were identical to those of MRSE PVE isolates
from the same decade. However, while all of the contemporary
(1998 to 2001) MRSE blood isolates were in the same clonal groups
as the MRSE PVE isolates from the 1970s, 9 of the 10 contemporary
MSSE isolates were unrelated to all of the MRSE isolates. All
of the type IV SCC
mec-containing isolates, whether contemporary
or from the 1970s, were clustered into three clonal groups on
the basis of the presence of ST 2, 3, or 8. However, isolates
with either type II or type III SCC
mec were also in these clonal
groups, and isolates with identical MLSTs carried more than
one SCC
mec type (ST 2 with SCC
mec types II and IV and ST 8 with
SCC
mec types I, II, III, and IV).

DISCUSSION
In the present study we found that 36% of
S. epidermidis isolates
recovered in the 1970s from patients with documented PVE contained
mecA within a type IV SCC
mec resistance island. The DNA sequence
of
S. epidermidis SCC
mec type IV was identical to the element
found in community-onset MRSA strains of
S. aureus (
21). Evaluation
of MLST data has suggested that transfer of SCC
mec into MSSA
strains prevalent in a given region produced MRSA. Enright et
al. (
12) proposed that pandemic clones of hospital-associated
MRSA emerged as a result of the insertion of SCC
mec into five
separate sensitive epidemic lineages. Similarly, strains of
MRSA have arisen in Native American communities that have little
association with the health care system. These isolates have
pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns that are identical
to those of prevalent MSSA isolates except for the presence
of type IV SCC
mec. These isolates are completely distinct from
hospital-associated isolates (
14,
22,
25).
The hypothesis of the transfer of SCCmec between S. epidermidis and S. aureus is supported by several lines of evidence. First, the nucleotide sequence of the entire 24 kb of type IV SCCmec in the 16 isolates of S. epidermidis that we examined was identical to the published sequence of type IV SCCmec in S. aureus strains acquired in the community. This is in contrast to findings for the rest of the S. epidermidis genome, in which only 17% of the open reading frames have at least 80% identity to S. aureus over their entire length (S. Gill, The Institute for Genome Research, personal communication). This suggests that interspecies exchange of this DNA has occurred.
Second, we previously documented that the insertion junction of IS1272 into the mecR1 gene of SCCmec type I from S. aureus COL was identical to the junction in S. epidermidis. On the basis of the finding that IS1272 is present throughout the genomes of S. haemolyticus and S. epidermidis and that it is less frequently found in the genome of S. aureus, we postulated that the insertion event occurred in CoNS, with subsequent transfer of IS1272-containing SCCmec to S. aureus (4). In the present study we also found the IS1272 insertion junctions of S. epidermidis and S. aureus SCCmec type IV to be identical. Thus, not only does this provide additional evidence for the interspecies transfer of the SCCmec element, but it also suggests that recombination occurred in CoNS between type I sequences and additional sequences and generated type IV SCCmec. The type IV sequences were subsequently transferred into S. aureus.
Third, MR is highly prevalent among S. epidermidis isolates and is less common among S. aureus isolates. Over 80% of S. epidermidis isolates from documented infections are MR, MRSE is the predominant skin flora of hospitalized patients, and colonizing MRSE can persist on the skin for months after discharge (2, 3, 5). In contrast, MRSA infections comprise from 30 to 50% of hospital-associated S. aureus cases, after discharge MRSA is usually carried in the nose only, and only a small percentage of carriers harbor MRSA. Thus, the reservoir of SCCmec is likely to be larger in S. epidermidis both in the hospital and in the community.
Finally, as we documented in the present study, type IV SCCmec was highly prevalent among S. epidermidis isolates causing infections in the 1970s (being found in 36% of isolates) and was not found among MRSA isolates recovered during that time. Ito et al. found that only 2 of 38 MRSA isolates recovered from patients in Europe, Israel, and Japan between 1961 and 1993 carried SCCmec type IV, and these were from 1981 and 1985 (18). Among 15 MRSA isolates in our collection of isolates from the United States in which IS1272 was found to have been inserted into mecR1, 9 were isolated between 1961 and 1983 and 6 were isolated between 1983 and 1990. None of nine (0%) of isolates from the early group contained type IV SCCmec; all were type I. In contrast, five of six isolates recovered between 1983 and 1990 (83%) carried type IV SCCmec (H. Wisplinghoff and G. Archer, unpublished data). Thus, the first S. aureus isolates carrying type IV SCCmec were recovered from patients in the early 1980s and S. epidermidis isolates carrying this element were prevalent in the early 1970s.
As mentioned above, MLST has been an excellent tool for assessing the movement of SCCmec among S. aureus strains (11, 12). Identical or closely related STs have been found to harbor different SCCmec types, including type IV. We used the same MLST scheme for S. epidermidis that was used for S. aureus and found that it provided excellent clonal discrimination. There were from 5 to 10 alleles of each gene and 32 STs among 67 isolates. We found that identical or closely related (i.e., differing by only one allele) STs carried each of the SCCmec types (I, II, III, or IV) and that the same SCCmec type could be found within multiple, often unrelated STs. However, among the S. epidermidis isolates that carried type IV SCCmec, all 16 recovered from patients between 1973 and 1983 and two of the five SCOPE isolates from the late 1990s were in three clonal groups. In addition, all three MSSE isolates recovered from patients with PVE in the 1970s were in the same clonal group as the MRSE isolates containing type IV SCCmec. These data suggest that there is transfer of SCCmec among S. epidermidis strains and that certain clones are both preferential recipients for type IV SCCmec and more successful at environmental competition, having survived for almost 30 years.
MLST and SCCmec typing have proven invaluable for epidemiological and evolutionary investigations of S. aureus, and here we demonstrated the utility of these techniques for studies of S. epidermidis. The theory that CoNS represent a large genetic pool of resistance genes (available to the more virulent species S. aureus) has been confirmed in this report, and future work applying the methods used here will be useful in quantifying the extent of gene flow in the staphylococci.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported in part by NIH grant R-37 AI 35705.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University Health System, 1101 East Marshall St., Sanger Hall, Room 7-082, Richmond, VA 23298. Phone: (804) 828-9711. Fax: (804) 828-3097. E-mail:
garcher{at}hsc.vcu.edu.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, November 2003, p. 3574-3579, Vol. 47, No. 11
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.11.3574-3579.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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