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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, July 2004, p. 2355-2363, Vol. 48, No. 7
0066-4804/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.48.7.2355-2363.2004
Division of Molecular Biology, Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Laurel, Maryland
Received 29 July 2003/ Returned for modification 6 November 2003/ Accepted 29 February 2004
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Phe mutations, whereas selection with ciprofloxacin or nalidixic acid favored recovery of Asp87
Gly mutants. Fluoroquinolone-resistant Salmonella strains isolated from veterinary or clinical settings frequently display a mutational spectrum with a preponderance of transition SNPs in the QRDR, the pattern found in vitro among mutS mutator mutants reported here. Both the preponderance of transition mutations and the varied mutation spectra reported for veterinary and clinical isolates suggest that bacterial mutators defective in methyl-directed mismatch repair may play a role in the emergence of quinolone and fluoroquinolone resistance in feral settings. |
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Resistance to the quinolones and fluoroquinolones can arise by distinct pathways. Major targets for these antibiotics are the DNA topoisomerases required for bacterial replication. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) arise in gyrA, encoding the GyrA subunit of DNA gyrase, and allow relief from inhibition by the antibiotic without eliminating the essential function of the gene product. SNPs are clustered in a relatively short portion of gyrA called the quinolone resistance-determining region (QRDR) (44). Many surveys of quinolone-resistant Salmonella strains from human and animal sources have associated nalidixic acid resistance with the frequent occurrence of QRDR SNPs (6, 13-15, 27, 35, 40, 43). While most of these reports focus on developed countries, it is clear that once resistance appears in developing countries, it can spread rapidly, as has nalidixic acid resistance in Thailand (16) and Vietnam (39).
High-level fluoroquinolone resistance does not develop by a single-step gyrA mutation, in contrast to nalidixic acid resistance (29, 34). parC, which encodes topoisomerase IV, is also targeted by quinolone antibiotics, presumably because the QRDR of parC is highly homologous to that of gyrA. Although mutations in parC are frequently encountered in gram-positive fluoroquinolone-resistant organisms (29), they are only rarely observed in Escherichia coli (42) and are generally absent in Salmonella mutants derived from either collections of field isolates (34) or from stepwise generation of high-level resistance in vitro (12). What appears to be the first example of a parC mutation in Salmonella was reported only recently (31).
Fluoroquinolone resistance can also be due to the mar (multiantibiotic resistance) locus (1, 29, 34, 36). This phenotype is associated with increased efflux across the cell membrane, altering sensitivity to several classes of antibiotics, including the fluoroquinolones, and to tetracycline and chloramphenicol. The phenotype is more often associated with alterations in structure or expression of regulatory proteins (marRAB, marC, or soxRS products) than with the structural proteins of the pump itself (AcrAB and TolC). Removal of OmpF, a porin, produces a similar phenotype in other species but has rarely been reported in Salmonella spp.
The role that particular mutators, namely those which are defective in methyl-directed mismatch repair (MMR), might play in the emergence of antibiotic resistance in enteric bacteria has recently attracted much attention (7, 18, 21, 33, 37). It was demonstrated previously that MMR mutators are disproportionately represented in natural populations of bacteria (21). It was also shown that selection pressures, when placed on bacterial populations, culled and selectively increased the numbers of MMR mutators. For example, the selection of histidine prototrophs from a population of Salmonella histidine auxotrophs (22) or of Lac+ events from an E. coli Lac population (28) increased the numbers of MMR mutators 100- to 1,000-fold. By imposing further rounds of selection pressures, using antibiotic selection, for example, Miller et al. (28) showed that the MMR mutators could be selectively increased to 100% of the population. The significance of MMR mutators in the clinical setting was recently reinforced when it was shown that a high proportion of antibiotic-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates derived from cystic fibrosis patients were MMR mutators (33). As P. aeruginosa is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in individuals with cystic fibrosis, patients are treated with a long-term regimen of antibiotics. It was reasoned that such usage of antibiotics most likely selected for the mutator phenotype (20, 33).
Inactivation of MMR leads to a dramatic increase in both transition base pair substitutions and frameshift mutations (8), thus yielding mutational spectra distinct from those obtained from the corresponding nonmutators. These patterns were borne out in previous studies of E. coli and Salmonella mutators isolated from natural populations (22, 23). Alterations in mutation spectra due to DNA repair defects have been used in a variety of systems to document the physiology of the cells in which mutations have occurred. For example, mutational patterns associated with the hereditary excision repair defect found in patients with xeroderma pigmentosum are reflected in the p53 mutations identified in the skin carcinomas to which these patients are prone (26). Here, we compare the spectra of mutations obtained from mutant populations of MMR-proficient or -deficient Salmonella strains derived under selection using nalidixic acid, enrofloxacin, and ciprofloxacin.
(Portions of this work were presented previously [D. D. Levy, B. Sharma, and T. A. Cebula, Abstr. 102nd Gen. Meet. Am. Soc. Microbiol., abstr. A-5, 2002].)
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gyrA mutation spectra. Both mutator (SL226) and nonmutator (SL223) strains were inoculated from frozen glycerol stocks into brain heart infusion (BHI) broth, and 24 to 72 3-ml portions were shaken overnight (18 to 22 h) at 37°C. Mutants were identified by plating 100 to 300 µl onto Luria-Bertani (LB) agar containing 50 µg of nalidixic acid (Sigma Chemical Co.) per ml, 0.25 µg of enrofloxacin (Baytril, 99.9%; Bayer Corp., Kansas City, Mo.) per ml, or 0.05 µg of ciprofloxacin hydrochloride (Bayer, Kankakee, Ill.) per ml. Antibiotics were used at or just above MICs as determined by growth on agar plates. Identical mutations found in separate tubes were independent events, reducing the likelihood that characterization of sibling progeny of an organism with the initial mutagenic event would distort the mutation spectrum. Serial dilutions of the contents of some of the tubes (5 to 12 tubes) were plated in triplicate on nonselective LB agar plates, and colonies were counted to evaluate mutation frequencies. Colonies found on selective plates were isolated as single colonies once on the same medium and a second time on a nonselective medium to avoid the selection of secondary mutations arising during subsequent handling.
The use of oligonucleotides to probe bacterial colonies is a technique long cited in the bacterial mutagenesis literature as a means of identifying SNPs (5, 9). Oligonucleotide probes, described in Fig. 1, were used to detect mutations in gyrA. Colony hybridization was performed as described previously (19). Briefly, colonies were grown on BHI agar plates overnight and transferred to paper filters. The bacterial mass was lysed and dried onto the filter and then probed with
-32P-labeled oligonucleotide probes at 57 to 60°C, depending on the oligonucleotide. The use of short (18- to 19-mer) probes and stringent hybridization and washing conditions allowed for discrimination of single-base-pair differences. Mutants which showed hybridization to only wild-type probes (or with anomalous probe results) were checked by DNA sequencing.
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FIG. 1. (A) Amino acid and nucleotide sequences of the QRDR of S. enterica; (B) sequences of probes used to identify the QRDR sequence. The underlined altered base causes the mutation listed to the left or right of the probe sequence.
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To sequence the Salmonella parC gene, primers 5'-AATGAGCGATATGGCAGAGC and 5'-AACATTTTCGGTTCCTGCATG were used. They were derived from genomic sequencing of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium (30) and amplify a 450-bp product. Sequencing was performed as described for gyrA, except that the first amplification primer listed above was also used as a sequencing primer, and denaturation took place at 55°C during thermal cycling.
Antimicrobial resistance was measured with a disk diffusion assay (32). Strains were inoculated into BHI broth directly from frozen stocks. During the early stationary phase (1 < optical density at 600 nm < 2), an aliquot was diluted to an optical density at 600 nm of 0.1 and plated on Mueller-Hinton agar, and Sensi-Discs (Becton Dickinson, Paramus, N.J.) containing antibiotic were applied. Zone diameters were measured after growth overnight at 37°C. When no growth inhibition was apparent, a zone diameter of 6 mm, the diameter of the disk, was used to calculate the average values for replicate experiments.
Statistics. Fisher's exact test was used to compare ratios (e.g., frequencies of transversions, mutations in the QRDR versus elsewhere, and mutations at various sites within the QRDR). Antibiotic sensitivity (measured by a disk diffusion assay) was evaluated by Student's t test to compare the averages of multiple strains, and the variances were compared by the F distribution test.
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TABLE 1. Isolation of antibiotic-resistant mutants
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Most mutants contained a single mutation in the QRDR that was identified by the probe hybridization technique. The distribution of these mutations is presented in Fig. 2. In almost all cases, probe analysis identified the wild-type sequence or an expected SNP. To confirm the specificity of the probes, DNA was PCR amplified from randomly selected colonies (30 of 512 [6%] of colonies with SNPs and 24 of 183 [13%] of isolates to which wild-type sequence probes hybridized). DNA sequencing of each PCR product confirmed the genotype identified by probe hybridization.
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FIG. 2. Spectrum of QRDR SNPs recovered after selection by the indicated antibiotic. White and solid-color pie slices represent transition base substitution mutations; hatched and striped areas indicate transversions. ENR, enrofloxacin; CIP, ciprofloxacin; NAL, nalidixic acid; n, total number of strains with QRDR SNPs.
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Asn (found in three independent mutants in the SL226 spectrum), Gly81
Asp (found four times with SL223 and three times with SL226), or Ser83
Ala (found once with SL223).
Most of the mutations identified in the mismatch repair-deficient strain were transition mutations (Table 1), as expected for this phenotype (8). The mutation spectra derived for the mutator strain were considerably less complex due to the absence of transversion SNPs. Virtually all mutator mutants contained either Ser83
Phe or Asp87
Gly QRDR mutations. The relative frequency of each of these mutations, however, depended on the antibiotic used for selection. For example, the Ser83
Phe mutation was significantly more frequent in mutants derived with enrofloxacin and significantly less frequent when nalidixic acid or ciprofloxacin was used in selection of mutants (P < 108, Fisher's exact test). Similar trends are evident in mutants selected from the nonmutator strain (Fig. 2, top). The increased frequency of Ser83
Phe mutations compared to Asp87
Gly mutations is significant with enrofloxacin selection (P = 105). For selection with ciprofloxacin and nalidixic acid, the relative frequencies of these two mutations are reversed, but the difference is of borderline significance when the frequencies are compared directly (P of 0.055 and 0.068, respectively). Comparing the same frequencies between spectra, the increased frequency of Ser83
Phe mutations in nonmutators under enrofloxacin versus ciprofloxacin or nalidixic acid selection is highly significant (P < 107). The decreased frequency at which Asp87
Asn mutations were found was also significant (P of 0.0090 and 0.043 for ciprofloxacin and nalidixic acid, respectively). Changes in frequencies for other mutations were not significant, except for the increase in transversion mutations discussed earlier.
The patterns of mutation leading to quinolone resistance in Salmonella described here are remarkably different from those found in E. coli (11, 42). The spectrum of QRDR SNPs is simpler, with fewer of the possible SNPs reported, although the occurrence of two SNPs in the same isolate is quite common. This may be due, at least in part, to the influence of the surrounding nucleic acid sequence on the frequency of gene mutation. The QRDR appears to be a hot spot for genetic variation in a region of gyrA that is otherwise highly conserved across a broad range of species (41). A single-base-pair change can have far-reaching consequences on the mutation rate at both nearby and distal portions of the surrounding sequence (24, 25). Thus, gene polymorphisms confined to silent changes in the third positions of codons may have contributed to the differences in mutation spectra observed between E. coli and Salmonella.
We next compared the mutation spectra generated in vitro with reports of gyrA SNPs in the literature. While most of these are case reports or describe small collections of strains, several larger surveys of Salmonella (>30 QRDR mutants) have been reported. Three features are immediately obvious from comparisons of the data from these surveys with one another and with the data reported here (Fig. 3). First, selection of quinolone-resistant strains from veterinary or clinical populations almost invariably resulted in Salmonella strains with QRDR SNPs. Second, transversion mutations were rare in most, but not all, of these studies. Finally, the relative frequency of each mutation within the QRDR differed widely from study to study. Each of these features is remarkably similar to the patterns of mutation in the QRDR region of MMR mutators reported here, consistent with the hypothesis that the QRDR SNPs in these veterinary and clinical isolates arose in organisms defective in MMR.
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FIG. 3. Comparison of in vitro results (see Fig. 2 and Table 1) with literature reports of QRDR SNPs in collections of Salmonella strains isolated from veterinary and human infections. Clockwise from top left, the data are from the present paper (SL223 selected with enrofloxacin); from works cited in references 15, 27, 43, 6, 40, and 35; and from the present paper (SL226 selected with enrofloxacin). Solid black indicates a wild-type (w.t.) QRDR sequence. Transition mutations are indicated by shaded portions, and transversions are indicated by hatched or striped portions.
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parC mutations are occasionally found in fluoroquinolone-resistant E. coli but are rare in Salmonella. To determine the role of parC inactivation in our collection, 24 mutants which lacked QRDR SNPs and were sensitive to chloramphenicol were selected. This sample contained equal numbers of mutator and nonmutator mutants, and representative sports were picked under selection conditions with each of the three antibiotics. The sequence of the 5' end of the gene (corresponding to codons 9 to 145) in all 24 mutants and in the two parental strains was identical to the GenBank entry for parC obtained during whole-genome sequencing of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium (30). Thus, spontaneous mutations in parC were not a frequent cause of quinolone resistance in Salmonella in this in vitro selection system.
We next tested the mutants' degree of resistance to each of the three antibiotics by a disk diffusion assay. All mutants with a specific mutation were screened unless there were sufficient numbers to justify random selection (Table 2). Most isolates with the same QRDR SNP had similar zones of inhibition, with the standard deviation being generally less than 10% of the mean.
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TABLE 2. Zone diameters around disks containing nalidixic acid, ciprofloxacin, or enrofloxacin in a Kirby-Bauer assay
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FIG. 4. Antibiotic sensitivity (measured by the zone of inhibition in the disk diffusion assay) as a function of the number of times the mutation was recovered following selection with nalidixic acid (Nal) ( ), ciprofloxacin (Cipro) (), or enrofloxacin (Enro) ( ). Zone diameters for unmutated parental strains are indicated by the upper horizontal line. The lower horizontal line indicates the NCCLS breakpoint for intermediate ciprofloxacin sensitivity and for nalidixic acid resistance.
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The diameter of the zone of inhibition was slightly smaller for strains with a missense QRDR SNP than for those without a QRDR mutation (23.4 versus 26.2 mm). Closer inspection of the data revealed that the small difference in mean MICs between mutants with and without a QRDR SNP, while highly significant (P = 108, Student's t test), disguised considerable diversity among the individual mutants (F distribution, P < 0.003). As illustrated in Fig. 5, the range of zone diameters for isolates with no QRDR SNP extended both higher and lower than the range for mutants with a QRDR SNP. Replicate assays of the parental strains resulted in a diameter of 26 to 28 mm around a chloramphenicol disk. The zone diameters for mutants with a QRDR SNP were mostly in the same range, although for 16% (10 of 63), the diameters were slightly smaller (range, 21 to 25 mm). In contrast, 59% (68 of 115) of the quinolone-resistant isolates lacking QRDR SNPs were less sensitive to chloramphenicol than were the quinolone-sensitive isolates. Many of these (29 of 115 [25%]) had a zone of inhibition around the chloramphenicol disk that was smaller (<21 mm) than that of any isolate with a mutated QRDR. A small number (6 of 115 [5%]) were hypersensitive to chloramphenicol, with inhibition zones of up to 32 mm.
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FIG. 5. Antibiotic sensitivity (measured by the zone of inhibition) of strains with QRDR SNPs (left panel) or with no QRDR SNP (right panel) under selection conditions with nalidixic acid ( ), ciprofloxacin ( ), or enrofloxacin ( ). Filled symbols indicate data for antibiotic-sensitive control strains.
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Most studies of clinical or veterinary isolates relied exclusively on nalidixic acid screening. This technique resulted in identification of a collection of mutants with QRDR SNPs similar to those of the mutation spectrum obtained with a mutant population derived under in vitro selection, also using nalidixic acid (Table 1). Two studies that employed ciprofloxacin to select isolates had high frequencies of resistant strains lacking QRDR SNPs (6, 15), similar to those of isolates selected with fluoroquinolone antibiotics following in vitro growth (Table 1). Thus, QRDR SNPs may be more closely associated with nalidixic acid resistance than with fluoroquinolone resistance and may not be necessary as the first step towards high-level fluoroquinolone resistance outside the laboratory.
In prior reports, comparisons of QRDR SNPs with other phenotypes such as phage type (40), with sensitivity to quinolone antibiotics (13), or with sensitivity to other classes of antibiotics (27) failed to produce convincing correlations. Furthermore, there is remarkably little consistency in the pattern of SNPs isolated from various populations (Fig. 3). Overall, these data strongly suggest that, if the spread of fluoroquinolone resistance is clonal, the important genetic loci remain to be identified and that QRDR SNPs arise often, independently, and not as the initial step.
It has been suggested that MMR mutator strains be used routinely to discover new mechanisms of antibiotic resistance that are likely to emerge in natural populations (A. J. O'Neill and I. Chopra, Letter, Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 45:1599-1600, 2001). Differences between patterns of mutation in MMR mutators and DNA repair-proficient organisms may explain some of the discrepancies found between natural isolates and those generated in vitro by stepwise selection protocols (for examples, see references 12 and 17). While mutations generated in vitro cannot always be tolerated by strains which must survive in more challenging environments (12), by starting with an MMR-deficient strain in vitro, we have generated a collection of mutants, each likely containing a single-step mutation, which may be useful in identifying new loci important for fluoroquinolone resistance. Fluoroquinolone-resistant strains isolated from clinical and veterinary settings could then be examined for these changes.
In summary, the spectra of mutations recovered in collections of quinolone-sensitive Salmonella strains were sensitive to both metabolic characteristics of the strain (e.g., the mutator phenotype) and the conditions of selection (e.g., the antibiotics used). Nonmutators selected with fluoroquinolone antibiotics frequently contained mutations outside of the gyrA QRDR, unlike Salmonella spp. isolated from clinical or veterinary sources. The lack of consistency among mutation spectra reported for clinical and veterinary samples suggests a wide variability in the conditions under which the mutations in those strains arose. However, the patterns of mutation are consistent with an overrepresentation of strains exhibiting mutation patterns of the MMR mutator phenotype among Salmonella spp. developing resistance to fluoroquinolone antibiotics worldwide. The promiscuity of MMR strains might also lead to a variety of recombinational events among strains in clinical and veterinary settings, explaining the heterogeneity of phenotypes reported in quinolone- and fluoroquinolone-resistant strains isolated from those settings.
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