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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, September 2003, p. 2978-2980, Vol. 47, No. 9
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.9.2978-2980.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
New Plasmid-Borne Antibiotic Resistance Gene Cluster in Pasteurella multocida
Corinna Kehrenberg,1 Nga Thi Thu Tham,1,2 and Stefan Schwarz1*
Institut für Tierzucht, Bundesforschungsanstalt für Landwirtschaft (FAL), 31535 Neustadt-Mariensee, Germany,1
Institute of Biotechnology, National Center for Science and Technology, 10000 Hanoi, Vietnam2
Received 27 January 2003/
Returned for modification 7 April 2003/
Accepted 17 May 2003

ABSTRACT
A new antibiotic resistance gene cluster comprising genes for
sulfonamide (
sul2), streptomycin (
strA-
strB), and tetracycline
[
tetR-
tet(H)] resistance was detected on plasmid pVM111 from
Pasteurella multocida. The
tetR-
tet(H) gene region was inserted
between
sul2 and
strA, possibly by illegitimate recombination.
Two potential recombination sites of 18 and 25 bp were identified.

TEXT
The first tetracycline resistance (
tet) gene of hybridization
class H was detected in 1993 on plasmid pVM111 (
4) from a
Pasteurella multocida isolate obtained in 1975 from the tissues of a turkey
in California that had died of avian cholera (
5). Later,
tet(H)
genes were also detected in porcine and bovine
P. multocida and
Mannheimia haemolytica isolates (
3). In 1998, the
tet(H)
gene was identified as part of the composite transposon Tn
5706 from
P. multocida (
12). In recent years, three types of
tet(H)-carrying
plasmids, designated pPMT1 (
12), pPAT1 (
8), and pMHT1 (
7), have
been analyzed in detail. All these plasmids were detected in
either
P. multocida,
Pasteurella aerogenes, or various
Mannheimia sp. isolates from cattle or pigs. They were 4.4 to 6.8 kb in
size and mediated only tetracycline resistance. While restriction
maps and sequence data for the regions flanking the
tetR-
tet(H)
gene region were available for these plasmids, the corresponding
data are still missing for pVM111. Since plasmid pVM111 has
been found to be larger than the other
tet(H)-carrying plasmids
known so far and has also been found to mediate sulfonamide
and streptomycin resistance by genes that have not been further
specified (
4), we analyzed plasmid pVM111 for its resistance
genes and their organization with regard to cotransfer of the
resistance genes and its impact on the development and spread
of multiresistance.
Plasmid pVM111 was transformed into Escherichia coli JM109 by the CaCl2 method, and transformants were selected on Luria-Bertani agar supplemented with 20 µg of tetracycline/ml. Pure plasmid DNA suitable for restriction mapping, PCR analysis, cloning experiments, and sequence analysis was obtained by alkaline lysis with subsequent purification by affinity chromatography on Midi columns (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) (9). Restriction mapping already suggested that pVM111 does not carry a complete copy of Tn5706. Confirmation of the presence of the tet(H) gene was done by PCR (3). PCR-directed analysis of the genes responsible for sulfonamide and streptomycin resistance (10, 11) revealed the presence of the genes sul2 and strA in pVM111.
In previous studies with isolates of P. aerogenes, M. haemolytica, Mannheimia varigena, and Mannheimia taxon 10 from cattle and swine, the primers suitable for the detection of a linkage of the genes sul2 and strA led to the identification of a first resistance gene cluster in which a catA3 gene for chloramphenicol resistance was inserted into the noncoding spacer between sul2 and strA (10, 11). The same approach with the primer combination sul1 and str2 (the sequence of the forward primer was from the 5' end of sul2, and the sequence of the reverse primer was from the 3' end of strA) (10) and pVM111 DNA as the template resulted in an amplicon of ca. 3.5 kb. When this amplicon was used as a template for PCR analysis, positive results were seen not only for sul2 and strA but also for tet(H), suggesting that a tet(H) segment might have been inserted between sul2 and strA.
For sequence analysis, the two ca. 4.5-kb EcoRI-PstI fragments and the 0.8-kb PstI fragment (Fig. 1) were cloned into pBluescript II SK(+) (Stratagene, Amsterdam, The Netherlands). Both strands of the small PstI fragment and the EcoRI-PstI fragment which contained the tetR-tet(H) region as well as the strA-strB genes were sequenced completely, while fragments of approximately 850 bp at both ends of the second EcoRI-PstI fragment were sequenced (Fig. 1). In total, the sequence of a ca. 7-kb segment of the 9.8-kb plasmid pVM111 was determined by primer walking starting with M13 universal and reverse primers (Stratagene). Analysis of the sequence showed the arrangement of the resistance genes displayed in Fig. 1. Studies of the sequence at the junctions between the tetR-tet(H) gene region and the adjacent sul2 and strA upstream sequences suggested that integration of the tet gene region might have occurred by illegitimate recombination. Two possible recombination sites of 18 and 25 bp were identified (Fig. 2). Recombination between the noncoding region downstream of tet(H) in Tn5706 with the terminal sul2 sequence resulted in an extension of the sul2 reading frame by one codon, in addition to the change of the final three codons of sul2 in pVM111 (Fig. 2). Variations in the terminal parts of the sul2 reading frame which caused either an extension or a shortening of the sul2 reading frame but which did not affect the biological activity of the corresponding dihydropteroate synthase have previously been observed in plasmids pLS88 from Haemophilus ducreyi (2) and pYFC1 from "Pasteurella haemolytica" (1). The sequence of the 18-bp recombination site (Fig. 2) showed 67% identity to the sequence of sul2-strA-strB-carrying plasmid RSF1010 (14) and 78% identity to the corresponding part of the Tn5706 sequence (12). The second recombination site of 25 bp was located in the noncoding spacer downstream of tetR and upstream of strA. It showed 64% identity to the RSF1010 sequence and 76% identity to the noncoding region downstream of tetR in Tn5706. The sequence of the tetR-tet(H) gene region of pVM111 corresponded exactly to that previously described by Hansen et al. (4). The sequences of the flanking parts corresponded closely to the sequence of broad-host-range plasmid RSF1010 (14).
Multiresistance gene clusters are of particular importance since
they confer resistance to several different antimicrobials or
classes of antimicrobials, e.g., sulfonamides, chloramphenicol,
and streptomycin (
10,
11) or sulfonamides, tetracyclines, and
streptomycin. When such resistance gene clusters are located
on plasmids, they are easily spread among strains, species,
and sometimes even genera. The spread of a plasmid carrying
a multiresistance gene cluster bears the danger of the coselection
and persistence of resistance genes even without direct selective
pressure. Previous studies have shown that
sul2-
strA-carrying
plasmids are widespread among gram-negative bacteria (
10,
16,
17) and that they are capable of accepting other resistance
genes, such as
catA3 (
10,
11) and
dfrA14 (
13), to form new resistance
gene clusters (Fig.
1). These observations were extended in
this study by the description of a new type of plasmid-borne
antibiotic resistance gene cluster in
P. multocida. Resistance
to sulfonamides, streptomycin, or tetracyclines had been reported
to occur at high frequencies of 72.6, 50.0, and 40.5%, respectively,
among
P. multocida isolates from Germany (
6); and resistance
to these antimicrobials represented the most prevalent type
of resistance in these bacteria. PCR screening of a large number
of independent
Pasteurella and
Mannheimia isolates from food-producing
animals confirmed that this new type of resistance gene cluster
has not yet been observed in European
Pasteurella and
Mannheimia isolates (
10,
11). However, the finding that approximately one-third
of the
sul2-
strA-carrying isolates identified in recent studies
(
10,
11) also harbored
tet(H) genes (
7-
9) might indicate the
potential for the development of such a cluster in European
isolates as well. For this, the widespread use of tetracyclines,
which account for almost two-thirds of all antimicrobials used
in veterinary medicine in the European Union member states and
Switzerland (
15), might represent a relevant selective force.
In addition, the observation that plasmids from
Pasteurella and
Mannheimia carrying any type of
sul2-
strA-based resistance
gene cluster known so far can replicate and express their resistance
genes not only in their original hosts but also in
E. coli underlines
the importance of these plasmids in the spread of antimicrobial
multiresistance.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The sequence of the 7,006-bp segment of pVM111 has been deposited in the EMBL database under accession number AJ514834.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Jean-Marc Collard for providing plasmid pVM111.
Nga Thi Thu Tham was financially supported by the Carl-Duisberg-Society.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institut für Tierzucht der Bundesforschungsanstalt für Landwirtschaft (FAL), Höltystr. 10, 31535 Neustadt-Mariensee, Germany. Phone: 49-5034-871-241. Fax: 49-5034-871-246. E-mail:
stefan.schwarz{at}fal.de.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, September 2003, p. 2978-2980, Vol. 47, No. 9
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.9.2978-2980.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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