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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, April 2004, p. 1374-1378, Vol. 48, No. 4
0066-4804/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.48.4.1374-1378.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Servicio de Microbiología. Complejo Hospitalario Universitario Juan Canalejo, 15006 La Coruña,1 Servicio de Microbiología, Hospital Clinic, 08036 Barcelona, Spain2
Received 4 July 2003/ Returned for modification 28 September 2003/ Accepted 8 January 2004
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Studies based on DNA-DNA hybridization have led to the description of 23 DNA homology groups, or genomospecies, within the genus Acinetobacter (5, 7, 11, 15, 21, 26). Seven species of this genus have been named and are included in the Index of the Bacterial and Yeast Nomenclatural Changes (19): (i) A. calcoaceticus, or genomospecies 1; (ii) A. baumannii, or genomospecies 2; (iii) A. haemolyticus, or genomospecies 4; (iv) A. junii, or genomospecies 5; (v) A. johnsonii, or genomospecies 7; (vi) A. lwoffii, or genomospecies 8; and (vii) A. radioresistens, or genomospecies 12. Groups 1 (A. calcoaceticus), 2 (A. baumannii), and the as-yet-unnamed and closely related genomic DNA groups 3 and 13TU (often referred to as the A. calcoaceticus-A. baumannii complex) are the most frequent species among clinical isolates, particularly A. baumannii and Acinetobacter genomospecies 3 (AG3) (5, 6, 13, 26).
Earlier studies showed statistically significant differences between the distributions in Hong Kong and Europe of genomic DNA groups of isolates obtained from blood cultures and various superficial carriage sites (10). Indeed, in some Hong Kong hospitals, AG3 strains accounted for up to 40% of the blood culture isolates (10). Antimicrobial susceptibilities also differed significantly among members of the A. calcoaceticus-A. baumannii complex, which indicates diversity in the molecular mechanisms involved in the antimicrobial resistance observed (14, 29). In keeping with this trend, A. baumannii was the most resistant genospecies.
The most common mechanism of the resistance of A. baumannii to ß-lactam antibiotics is attributed to the presence of ß-lactamases encoded either by the chromosome or by plasmids (2). Several class A, B, and D ß-lactamases (1, 2, 3, 22, 23, 27), as well as chromosome-mediated cephalosporinases (pI, >8) (2, 3) (which confer different resistance phenotypes to A. baumannii) have been described. However, only one ampC gene (AmpC of RYC52763) encoding an AmpC ß-lactamase (4) and two allelic variants (ABAC-1 and ABAC-2) (17) have been reported so far for A. baumannii strains.
Regarding ß-lactam resistance in the AG3 group, two metalloenzymes, VIM-2 and IMP-4, have been identified in Hong Kong and Korea (9, 30).
The aim of this study was to elucidate the mechanisms associated with the resistance to ß-lactam antibiotics shown by a clinical strain of Acinetobacter genomic DNA group 3 (AJC68081) identified by amplified ribosomal DNA restriction analysis (28) and isolated from a wound exudate of a patient treated at the Juan Canalejo Hospitalary Complex.
The susceptibility testing of the AJC68081 strain was performed by a microdilution method following the recommendations of the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards (20). Antibiotics were kindly provided by their manufacturers as powders of fixed potency. MICs were confirmed by the E-test. The antibiotic susceptibility profiles of all strains included in this study are shown in Table 1.
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TABLE 1. MICs of ß-lactams for clinical strain AJC68081, E. coli TG1, E. coli TG1 (pBE-1), and E. coli TG1 (pGER1)
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The possibility of a certain degree of homology between the present AG3 cephalosporinase and the previously reported ampC gene of A. baumannii allowed us to design oligonucleotides that could specifically amplify our target AG3 cephalosporinase gene by PCR. Chromosomal DNA from strain AJC68081 was purified according to standard protocols (MasterPure DNA purification kit; Epicentre, Madison, Wis.). Five hundred nanograms of the AG3 chromosome was used as a template to be amplified by PCR with the two oligonucleotides ampC1 forward (5'-TAGTATTCGTCGTTAGAAAACAAT) and ampC2 reverse (5'-GCTTAGGATATGTTTGGTTCTT) (Sigma-Genosys Ltd., Cambridge, United Kingdom), which hybridize in the untranslated regions of the A. baumannii (RYC52763) ampC gene (4). The PCR was performed under the following conditions: denaturation, 10 min at 94°C; amplification, 30 cycles of 1 min at 94°C, 1 min at 55°C, and 2 min at 72°C; and elongation, 16 min at 72°C. An aliquot (20 µl) of the sample was subjected to electrophoresis in a 1.0% agarose gel. The gel showed an amplified product, detected by ethidium bromide staining (50 mg/liter), of 1.3 kb, which was the expected size of the ampC gene in relation to that in A. baumannii. For further analysis, the 1.3-kb amplicon was ligated into pGEM-T easy vector (Promega Corporation, Madison, Wis.), and the recombinant plasmids were introduced into Escherichia coli TG1 by transformation with CaCl2 (24). The selection of transformants on Luria-Bertani agar plates supplemented with ampicillin (50 µg/ml), isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG, 25 µg/ml; Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany), and 5'-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside (X-Gal, 100 µg/ml; Roche Diagnostics) resulted in several white colonies, all carrying an identical recombinant plasmid. After alkaline lysis of the transformant (24), enzymatic digestion of the purified pGEM-T plasmid with EcoRI released a 1.3-kb DNA insert, confirming the success of the cloning procedure. The nucleotide sequence of the insert was elucidated by sequencing it with the Taq DyeDeoxiTerminator cycle sequencing kit before analysis with an automatic DNA sequencer (377 Abi-Prims, Perkin-Elmer). The entire sequence of the fragment was 1,321 bp long and contained one open reading frame (Fig. 1) of 1,152 bp (383 amino acids long). GenBank database searches with this open reading frame revealed similarities to several class C chromosome-mediated ß-lactamases (Table 2). At a protein level, the highest similarities detected (98.69 to 97.65%) were with the AmpC ß-lactamases AmpC ABAC-1, AmpC ABAC-2, and AmpC RYC52763 from A. baumannii, respectively (4, 17). Comparison of the amino acids in the AmpC ß-lactamases of AG3 with those in ABAC-1, ABAC-2, and AmpC RYC52763 from A. baumannii yielded five, eight, and nine amino acid differences, respectively (4, 17). The nucleotide sequence of the promoter region of the gene revealed two substitutions (A to G) at positions -21 and -53 with respect to that of ampC in A. baumannii (4). The importance of these changes in the regulation of the expression of the AmpC enzyme remains unknown.
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FIG. 1. Nucleotide sequence of the 1.3-kb fragment. The amino acid sequence deduced for AmpC G3 ß-lactamase is shown on the linebelow the nucleotide triplets. The ATG and TAA shown in boldface type represent the initiation and termination codons, respectively. A putative Shine-Dalgarno (S.D.) ribosomal recognition site is indicated. The positions of the primers used to sequence the gene and to detect the ampC gene in several AG3 strains are indicated by arrows. The positions of the primers used for amplification and further cloning of the gene are indicated by discontinuous arrows. The putative sequence of the signal peptide is indicated by boldface type and lowercase letters. The ß-lactamase active site SVSK, the conserved triad KTG, and the typical class C motif YXN are shown in boldface type (12).
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TABLE 2. Percent identity between amino acid sequences of AG3 AmpC and other class C ß-lactamases
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Chromosomal AmpC ß-lactamases may be inducible in some gram-negative rods, and genes such as the repressor ampR and ampD may be involved in this pathway (16). The sequences of the flanking regions of the gene encoding the AmpC ß-lactamase of A. baumannii did not show any homology with the ampR gene. Similarly, induction experiments with cefoxitin (at one-half the MIC) performed with the original AJC68081 strain did not show an increase in the synthesis of the AmpC ß-lactamase, measured as specific enzymatic activity (in micromoles of nitrocefin hydrolyzed per minute per microgram of protein) when the inducer was added (159 ± 38 µmol/min/µg of protein without the inducer, 145 ± 15 µmol/min/µg of protein in the presence of inducer). These experiments indicated that the AG3 AmpC ß-lactamase in this strain is noninducible.
To purify the AmpC enzyme, the blaampC gene was cloned in the pGEX-6P-1 vector, which allows a fusion protein between glutathione S-transferase and the AmpC enzyme. The ß-lactamase was purified at homogeneity with the GST gene fusion system (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Europe GmbH) according to the manufacturer's directions. With sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the purified protein appeared as a band of ca. 40 kDa (
95% purity) (data not shown). Kinetic experiments were performed as previously described (4). The specific activity of semipurified AmpC ß-lactamase was 49,000 µmol of nitrocefin/min/µg of protein. The relative enzymatic efficiency (Vmax/Km) values indicated that cephalothin was hydrolyzed with higher hydrolytic efficiency than ampicillin, as expected for a class C ß-lactamase (Table 3). This enzyme also showed moderate hydrolytic activity against cefuroxime and cefoxitin and very little hydrolytic activity against cefotaxime and imipenem; therefore, we could not obtain reliable Km and Vmax values for these antibiotics. Hydrolytic activity against ceftazidime was not detected. Fifty percent inhibitory concentrations were calculated as previously reported (4) (Table 3).
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TABLE 3. Kinetic parameters of the Acinetobacter genomic species 3 AmpC ß-lactamase
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The susceptibility of the clinical strain of AJC68081 to the combination of cefotaxime and ceftazidime with clavulanic acid is also remarkable (with a clavulanic acid MIC of 8 to 16 mg/liter [Table 1]). This unusual phenomenon has been detected in several strains of A. baumannii and AG3 and is independent of the presence of any extended-spectrum ß-lactamases, which are well inhibited by clavulanic acid (8). It is thought that this finding may be related to penicillin-binding protein alterations which increase the susceptibility to clavulanic acid (unpublished data).
Another important consideration is the role of the ß-lactamase under study in resistance to ß-lactams in AG3. The MICs for clinical strain AJC68081 were higher than those for the E. coli transformant expressing the G3 AmpC enzyme (Table 1). An explanation for this result could be that other antibiotic resistance mechanisms, such as a loss or a reduction of porin expression, a constitutively basal expression of some efflux pump, or penicillin-binding protein modifications, operate at the same time in A. baumannii and/or AG3, as no other ß-lactamases have been detected in clinical strain AJC68081.
The results obtained in the present study show that this AmpC ß-lactamase (i) may play an important role in ß-lactam resistance in AG3, (ii) was not inducible when cefoxitin was added (at one-half the MIC) and thus can be considered noninducible, and (iii) shows a typical cephalosporinase substrate profile, corresponding to that of a class C ß-lactamase.
In summary, we report for the first time the cloning, sequencing, and analysis of the ampC gene and the biochemical characterization of the AmpC ß-lactamase from a clinical strain of AG3.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The GenBank accession number for the AmpC ß-lactamase of AG3 is AJ575184.
This work was supported by Secretaria Xeral de Investigación e Desenvolvemento, Xunta de Galicia (grant PGIDT01PXR90101PR), and Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias (grant PI021415).
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