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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, November 2003, p. 3620-3622, Vol. 47, No. 11
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.11.3620-3622.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Rapid Detection and Estimation by Pyrosequencing of 23S rRNA Genes with a Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Conferring Linezolid Resistance in Enterococci
Alistair Sinclair,1 Catherine Arnold,2 and Neil Woodford1*
Antibiotic Resistance Monitoring and Reference Laboratory,1
Genomics, Proteomics and Bioinformatics Unit, Specialist and Reference Microbiology Division, Health Protection AgencyColindale, London NW9 5HT, United Kingdom2
Received 16 June 2003/
Returned for modification 31 July 2003/
Accepted 14 August 2003

ABSTRACT
Pyrosequencing was used to detect rapidly and estimate the number
of 23S rRNA genes with a G2576T mutation in 43 linezolid-resistant
and -susceptible clinical isolates of enterococci. The method
showed 100% concordance with PCR-restriction fragment length
polymorphism for detecting isolates homozygous for either G2576
or T2576 or heterozygous for this mutation. A good correlation
was found between linezolid MICs and the number of 23S rRNA
gene copies carrying the mutation.

TEXT
Enterococci, particularly
Enterococcus faecium, are often resistant
to multiple antibiotic classes, and therapy of serious infections
caused by them may be problematic. In consequence, linezolid,
a novel oxazolidinone (
4), is increasingly used to treat enterococcal
infections. Linezolid-resistant enterococci (LRE) are rare but
may emerge during linezolid therapy. This resistance is associated
with chromosomal mutations that affect the peptidyltransferase
domain of 23S rRNA (
9). In clinical LRE isolates, linezolid
resistance is mediated by a G2576T single nucleotide polymorphism
(SNP) in multiple alleles encoding 23S rRNA (
1,
5,
9); other
mutations, which have been reported in laboratory-generated
linezolid-resistant mutants of enterococci (
9), have not yet
been detected in clinical isolates. This SNP was also present
in the two reported linezolid-resistant isolates of methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) (
11,
12).
Previously, rapid detection of the G2576T polymorphism in enterococci by real-time PCR was described (13). That work, and the results of others (6, 12), indicated that some LRE and linezolid-resistant staphylococci were homozygous for T2576 but that more were heterozygous, containing some 23S rRNA gene copies with T2576 and others with G2576. Homozygosity for T2576, but not heterozygosity, has been associated with decreased fitness in vitro in the absence of linezolid selective pressure (W. Mazur, C. Knob, and H. S. Fraimow, Abstr. 42nd Intersci. Conf. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., abstr. C1-1607, 2002). We report here the use of pyrosequencing, which is an innovative technology suitable for the rapid detection of SNPs (http://www.pyrosequencing.com) (3, 7, 10), to detect and estimate the number of 23S rRNA genes containing T2576 mutations in clinical isolates of LRE.
Forty-three clinical isolates of E. faecium (n = 27, from 10 patients) or Enterococcus faecalis (n = 16, from 5 patients) were studied: 31 isolates were LRE (linezolid MICs,
8 µg/ml) known to contain the T2576 mutation (13); 12 isolates were susceptible to linezolid (MICs,
4 µg/ml).
Pyrosequencing was performed by using a PSQ 96 sample preparation kit and a PSQ 96MA analyzer (Pyrosequencing AB, Uppsala, Sweden) in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions. Briefly, a 96-bp fragment of 23S rRNA genes, spanning the G2576T SNP, was amplified from all isolates by using whole cells as the template and with previously published primers (13), except that the forward primer was labeled at the 5' position with biotin. All the primers for pyrosequencing were purified by high-performance liquid chromatography (Sigma-Genosys Ltd., Pampisford, United Kingdom). The PCR product was captured, and the biotin-labeled (forward) strand was separated by using streptavidin-Sepharose beads (Amersham Biosciences, Little Chalfont, United Kingdom). The resulting single-stranded DNA was used as a template for pyrosequencing with a primer (5'-CGT TCT GAA CCC AGC-3') located downstream of the G2576T SNP (Fig. 1). The pyrosequencing primer was designed to be complementary to the captured strand and was suitable for detecting this SNP in isolates of E. faecalis and E. faecium.
During the pyrosequencing reaction, the sequencing primer is
hybridized to the single-stranded template and incubated with
the enzymes DNA polymerase, ATP sulfurylase, luciferase, and
apyrase and the substrates adenosine 5' phosphosulfate and luciferin.
Four nucleotides are added to the reaction sequentially. Incorporation
of each nucleotide complementary to the template initiates a
cascade and results in separate releases of light. These are
detected and presented as peaks on a data trace called Pyrogram
(for full details, see
http://www.pyrosequencing.com). In the
G2576T SNP assay described here, extension of the pyrosequencing
primer resulted in the incorporation, first of T (in all isolates),
followed either by C (complementary to G2576, wild type) or
by A (complementary to T2576, mutant), followed by nucleotides
complementary to those upstream of the SNP (Fig.
1). As the
amount of light released at each extension step is directly
proportional to the amount of nucleotide added, the relative
numbers of T2576 and G2576 23S rRNA gene copies could be estimated
from the relative peak heights on data traces and based on the
assumption of six copies in
E. faecium and four copies in
E. faecalis (
http://rrndb.cme.msu.edu). In parallel experiments,
qualitative detection of the G2576T SNP was performed by PCR-restriction
fragment length polymorphism analysis by using
NheI digests
of a 633-bp 23S rRNA gene fragment (
13).
Qualitatively, the pyrosequencing data were in complete agreement with the PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism results. Thus, the new method clearly identified isolates that were homozygous for either G2576 or T2576 or heterozygous at this position (Fig. 2). The estimation of the numbers of T2576 copies was based on averaging data from three pyrosequencing experiments (and expressing them as a whole number of gene copies); each experiment was performed with a separate batch of amplified template DNA. Estimates of copy number were reproducible between runs; they were identical in all three experiments for 19 isolates and varied by no more than one gene copy for other isolates. To allow for this variation, estimates for each isolate were considered to be a range of copies rather than a precise value (Table 1). There was a good correlation between the estimated number of T2576 copies and an increasing linezolid MIC, particularly for the E. faecium isolates (Table 1). Pyrosequencing confirmed the presence of the T2576 polymorphism in one to two 23S rRNA genes of an E. faecium isolate that was susceptible to linezolid (MIC, 4 µg/ml), thereby confirming the qualitative data obtained previously by real-time PCR (13).
View this table:
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TABLE 1. Correlation between linezolid MIC and the estimated number of 23S rRNA genes containing the T2576 mutation for clinical isolates of enterococci
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In conclusion, pyrosequencing was an effective, rapid method
for detecting and estimating copy numbers of the G2576T polymorphism
in LRE. The assay reported here might also be useful for detecting
this SNP in linezolid-resistant isolates of methicillin-resistant
S. aureus. The manual setup of each experiment (for 43 isolates)
took less than 90 min, and the actual pyrosequencing SNP analysis
runs (of up to 96 samples) were completed in less than 15 min.
Pyrosequencing was, therefore, slightly quicker than the real-time
PCR assay reported previously (
13) and had the additional benefit
of being semiquantitative. Pyrosequencing setup time could be
reduced further with automation (
http://www.pyrosequencing.com)
(
2). Previous attempts to estimate the number of 23S rRNA gene
copies containing the T2576 mutation in LRE or linezolid-resistant
staphylococci have usually been time-consuming, involving either
the cloning of pooled 23S ribosomal DNA amplicons, followed
by analysis of multiple recombinants (
6), Southern hybridization
of suitable probes to
NheI-digested genomic DNA (
8), or specific
amplification and sequencing of every 23S rRNA gene in the genome
of the isolates investigated (
8,
12). None of these approaches
is convenient for the analysis of multiple isolates. Another
approach, based on the densitometric analysis of digested PCR
amplicons, has also been reported (Mazur et al., 42nd ICAAC).
Pyrosequencing provided an extremely rapid alternative, and
its application to other medical microbiological purposes deserves
investigation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are grateful to Pyrosequencing AB for their support of this
work.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: ARMRL, SRMD, Health Protection AgencyColindale, 61 Colindale Ave., London NW9 5HT, United Kingdom. Phone: 44-20-8200-4400, ext. 4255. Fax: 44-20-8358-3292. E-mail:
neil.woodford{at}hpa.org.uk.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, November 2003, p. 3620-3622, Vol. 47, No. 11
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.11.3620-3622.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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