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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, August 2005, p. 3347-3354, Vol. 49, No. 8
0066-4804/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.49.8.3347-3354.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Role of Efflux Pumps and Topoisomerase Mutations in Fluoroquinolone Resistance in Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli
Beilei Ge,1,2
Patrick F. McDermott,3
David G. White,3 and
Jianghong Meng1*
Department of Nutrition and Food Science, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland,1
Department of Food Science, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana,2
Division of Animal and Food Microbiology, Office of Research, Center for Veterinary Medicine, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Laurel, Maryland3
Received 17 December 2004/
Returned for modification 25 February 2005/
Accepted 18 April 2005

ABSTRACT
Point mutations in the topoisomerase (DNA gyrase A) gene are
known to be associated with fluoroquinolone resistance in
Campylobacter.
Recent studies have shown that an efflux pump encoded by
cmeABC is also involved in decreased susceptibilities to fluoroquinolones,
as well as other antimicrobials. Genome analysis suggests that
Campylobacter jejuni contains at least nine other putative efflux
pumps. Using insertional inactivation and site-directed mutagenesis,
we investigated the potential contributions of these pumps to
susceptibilities to chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, erythromycin,
and tetracycline in
C. jejuni and
Campylobacter coli. Insertional
inactivation of
cmeB resulted in 4- to 256-fold decreases in
the MICs of chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, and
tetracycline, with erythromycin being the most significantly
affected. In contrast, inactivation of all other putative efflux
pumps had no effect on susceptibility to any of the four antimicrobials
tested. Mutation of
gyrA at codon 86 (Thr-Ile) caused 128- and
64-fold increases in the MICs of ciprofloxacin and nalidixic
acid, respectively. The replacement of the mutated
gyrA with
a wild-type
gyrA allele resulted in a 32-fold decrease in the
ciprofloxacin MIC and no change in the nalidixic acid MIC. Our
findings indicate that CmeABC is the only efflux pump among
those tested that influences antimicrobial resistance in
Campylobacter and that a point mutation (Thr-86-Ile) in
gyrA directly causes
fluoroquinolone resistance in
Campylobacter. These two mechanisms
work synergistically in acquiring and maintaining fluoroquinolone
resistance in
Campylobacter species.

INTRODUCTION
Campylobacter is a leading cause of food-borne bacterial infections
throughout the world (
7). Although most infections are self-limiting,
macrolides and fluoroquinolones are the antimicrobials of choice
to treat severe
Campylobacter infections (
39). While macrolide
resistance has been reported and remains intermittent, the prevalence
of fluoroquinolone-resistant
Campylobacter has escalated since
the late 1980s (
6,
8,
26,
37,
40). A study in Spain reported
high frequencies of ciprofloxacin resistance (72 to 99%) and
erythromycin resistance (34.5 to 81.1%) in their 1997-1998 isolates
from animals and humans (
37). Among human isolates in Pennsylvania,
fluoroquinolone-resistant
C. jejuni, which was not observed
between 1982 and 1992, increased to 40.5% in 2001 (
26). Fluoroquinolone
resistance in
Campylobacter is associated with point mutations
in the DNA gyrase subunit A gene (
gyrA) (
1,
32,
46). In addition,
there is growing evidence that efflux pumps play a role in fluoroquinolone
and erythromycin resistance of
Campylobacter (
4,
22). Recently,
a multidrug efflux pump, CmeABC, has been identified and characterized
in
Campylobacter jejuni (
17,
33). The amino acid sequence of
CmeB shows a 41% similarity to that of AcrB (
17), a major efflux
pump in
Escherichia coli (
20,
41). In wild-type
C. jejuni, this
pump was shown to mediate a 2- to 8-fold increase in the MICs
of ampicillin, ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, tetracycline, ethidium
bromide, and acridine orange (
33) and up to 4,000-fold in the
MIC of bile salts (
17,
18).
Efflux pumps are major components of the bacterial cell. In E. coli, it has been estimated that 15 to 20% of the genome may code for membrane transport proteins (43). At least 300 gene products are proposed to transport known substrates effectively, out of which
20 to 30 transport antimicrobials and other drugs (35). Five families of multidrug efflux pumps that provide resistance to clinically significant drugs and disinfectants are now known in prokaryotes (30). The ATP-binding cassette superfamily is a very large family that consists of ATP-driven uptake and efflux systems and includes ATP-driven multidrug pumps, such as P-glycoprotein and LmrA from Lactococcus lactis (44). The major facilitator (MFS) superfamily is another very large, ancient superfamily that consists of secondary transporters driven by chemiosmotic energy and includes proton/drug antiporters, such as QacA from Staphylococcus aureus (36). Both the resistance/nodulation/cell division (RND) and the small multidrug resistance families include proton-driven drug efflux pumps, such as E. coli AcrB (20) and EmrE (49), respectively. AcrB functions as a multisubunit complex in association with the outer membrane channel protein TolC and the membrane fusion protein AcrA. The multidrug and toxic compounds efflux (MATE) family consists of sodium ion-driven drug efflux pumps, such as NorM from Vibrio parahaemolyticus (25). The CmeABC pump of C. jejuni belongs to the RND superfamily. Recent genome-sequencing data for C. jejuni NCTC11168 indicates the presence of multiple putative drug efflux pumps (29). However, their roles in the antimicrobial resistance of Campylobacter have yet to be determined, and a complete microbial genome sequence of Campylobacter coli is not yet available. The objectives of this study were to identify these putative drug efflux pumps in C. jejuni and C. coli and to determine their roles, as well as that of a site-directed DNA gyrA point mutation, in fluoroquinolone resistance in Campylobacter.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains and growth conditions.
Two versions of
Campylobacter jejuni human clinical isolate
81-176 (
3) were kindly provided by Qijing Zhang and Patricia
Guerry and were designated 81-176 and 81-176G, respectively.
Strains 81-176ery, 81-176cip, and 81-176Gcip were derived from
81-176 or 81-176G as the parent strain by in vitro spontaneous
mutation selection on Mueller-Hinton agar (BD Diagnostic Systems,
Sparks, MD) plates containing erythromycin (ERY) or ciprofloxacin
(CIP) ranging from 2 to 16 times the MIC of the parent strains.
Campylobacter coli strains 124 and 241, resistant to both ERY
and CIP, were isolated from turkey and chicken meats, respectively
(
50).
Campylobacter jejuni and C. coli strains were routinely cultured on Mueller-Hinton agar or blood agar plates at 37°C or 42°C under microaerophilic conditions (85% N2, 10% CO2, and 5% O2). Escherichia coli DH5
as a host strain for plasmid vectors was grown aerobically in Luria-Bertani medium (Sigma-Aldrich, Co., St. Louis, MO) at 37°C. To select for recombinants, the growth medium was supplemented with either ampicillin (100 µg/ml), chloramphenicol (CHL; 20 µg/ml), or kanamycin (30 µg/ml) as needed.
Identification of putative efflux pumps.
Putative efflux pumps of Campylobacter (Table 1) were identified using the published genomic sequence database of C. jejuni NCTC11168 (http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Projects/C_jejuni/Cj_gene_list_hierarchical.shtml; 29). Coding regions suggestive of membrane transport proteins were determined using TransportDB (http://www.membranetransport.org; 35) and the operon predictions database (http://www.tigr.org/tigr-scripts/operons/pairs.cgi?taxon_id=110).
PCR and reverse transcription (RT)-PCR of putative efflux genes
were used to confirm the presence and expression of the putative
efflux genes identified. Chromosomal DNA was isolated using
a chromosomal DNA isolation kit (Mo Bio Laboratories Inc., Carlsbad,
CA). Total RNA was extracted with an RNeasy kit (QIAGEN, Valencia,
CA). RT-PCR was conducted with the Access RT-PCR system (Promega,
Madison, WI) following the recommendations of the manufacturer.
The same sets of primers were used for both PCR and RT-PCR,
except for
Cj0309c-
Cj0310c and
Cj1173-
Cj1174, where primers
encompassing the entire gene cluster were used for PCR and individual
gene primers were used for RT-PCR (Table
2). Each PCR mixture
contained 1
x PCR buffer, 0.2 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphate,
2.5 mM MgCl
2, 1 unit
Taq DNA polymerase, 1 µM of each
primer, and 5 µl of DNA template in a total reaction volume
of 50 µl. PCR was conducted using 30 cycles of denaturation
at 94°C for 1 min, primer annealing at 50°C for 1 min,
extension at 72°C for 1 min, and a final extension of 72°C
for 7 min in a GeneAmp PCR System 9600 (Perkin-Elmer, Foster
City, CA).
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TABLE 2. Primers for generating fragments to be cloned into recombinant plasmids in efflux pump inactivation and gyrA mutation studies
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Construction of gene deletions of putative efflux pumps.
Ten putative efflux pump genes or gene operons (Table
1), including
cmeABC, were selected as targets for insertional mutagenesis.
Individual mutants were generated by disrupting the coding regions
with a
Campylobacter chloramphenicol resistance (Cm
r) or kanamycin
resistance (Kan
r) cassette. Resistance cassettes were obtained
by excision from their host plasmids, pRY109 (
48) and pILL600
(
16), using PvuII and SmaI digestion, respectively. Cm
r was
used for mutation of all 10 genes, whereas Kan
r was also used
for the mutation of
cmeB and
Cj1033 in order to measure possible
changes in chloramphenicol susceptibility.
The restriction and modifying enzymes used were purchased from New England Biolabs (Beverly, MA). Target gene sequences were amplified by PCR using C. jejuni 81-176 as a template and primers listed in Table 2 and cloned into the plasmid vector pCR2.1 TOPO (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) or pT7Blue (Novagen, San Diego, CA). Cloned target sequences were linearized with a restriction enzyme (AflII, BsmFI, ClaI, EcoRV, NcoI, NdeI, SspI, or SwaI, depending on the target gene), blunt ended by Klenow polymerase where necessary, and ligated with either Cmr or Kanr. Recombinants were introduced into E. coli DH5
by electroporation. The orientation of the resistance marker was confirmed by PCR to be the same as that of the target efflux gene, which was previously shown to be nonpolar (45). The recombinant plasmid was harvested from E. coli DH5
and used to transform C. jejuni 81-176 via both natural transformation and electroporation following published protocols (11, 47). To construct mutants of additional C. jejuni or C. coli strains, the chromosomal DNAs of 81-176 mutants were purified and used to transform these strains using a standard biphasic natural transformation method (47). Successful transformation and recombination were confirmed by PCR amplification using target gene primers flanking the inserted cassette, which showed larger amplification bands (0.8 and 1.4 kb greater for Cmr and Kanr insertions, respectively) than for the parent strains (data not shown).
Construction of insertional mutants of Cj1028c and gyrA point mutation/reversion (Thr-86-Ile) in C. jejuni.
In order to introduce a point mutation in gyrA into a fluoroquinolone-susceptible parent strain (C. jejuni 81-176 and 81-176G) or reverse a mutated gyrA to a wild-type gyrA in a fluoroquinolone-resistant parent strain (C. jejuni 81-176cip and 81-176Gcip), a Cmr marker was inserted in the Cj1028c gene upstream of C. jejuni gyrA. Cj1028c encodes a possible purine/pyrimidine phosphoribosyltransferase (29). The Cmr marker was used to select gyrA mutants generated by homologous recombination. An 850-bp fragment containing the 3' region of Cj1028c, the intergenic region, and the gyrA sequence up to the mutation site was amplified by PCR using C. jejuni 81-176 as a template and primers listed in Table 2 and cloned into a pT7Blue vector. The modified vector was linearized using EcoRV, which cuts once within the inserted fragment (at nucleotide 320 of Cj1028c), ligated with a blunt-ended Cmr cassette, and electroporated into E. coli DH5
. Recombinant plasmids were purified from E. coli DH5
and used to transform the parent strains, C. jejuni 81-176, 81-176G, 81-176cip, and 81-176Gcip, by electroporation (11). Transformants were screened on agar plates containing chloramphenicol and confirmed by chromosomal DNA amplification of the gene flanking the insertion site. This resulted in either mutation (Thr-Ile; ACA-ATA) or reversion (Ile-Thr; ATA-ACA) of C. jejuni gyrA at codon 86 through homologous recombination, which was confirmed by DNA sequencing.
A point mutation at C. jejuni gyrA codon 86 was incorporated in each of the reverse PCR primers as shown in Table 2. Construct p86m:cm contained a specific mutation (ACA-ATA) converting Thr to Ile at codon 86 and displayed resistance to CIP and nalidixic acid (NAL). Construct p86:cm contained wild-type gyrA and was used to restore quinolone susceptibility in a resistant strain possessing a codon 86 point mutation. P86:cm also served as a control in susceptible strains to demonstrate that neither the presence nor the location of the Campylobacter Cmr cassette in Cj1028c had any polar effect on quinolone susceptibility.
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing.
Susceptibility testing was performed using agar dilution (9, 23). CHL, ERY, NAL, and tetracycline (TET) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich; CIP was obtained from Pentex, Miles Inc. (Kankakee, IL). The test range used for each antimicrobial was 0.03 to 512 µg/ml. The resistance breakpoints used were as follows: CHL,
32 µg/ml; CIP,
4 µg/ml; ERY,
8 µg/ml; NAL,
32 µg/ml; and TET,
16 µg/ml (9). Campylobacter jejuni ATCC 33560 was used as the quality control organism.
DNA sequencing.
The gyrA and 23S rRNA genes of Campylobacter parent and mutant strains were amplified using PCRs according to published studies (14, 51, 52) and sequenced at the University of Maryland Center for Biosystems Research. DNA sequences were aligned using the Sequencher program (Gene Codes Corporation, Ann Arbor, MI).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The GenBank accession numbers of the control sequences are L04566, AF092101, and U09611.

RESULTS
Identification of putative efflux pumps.
Based on the databases and BlastP searches, we identified 10
putative drug efflux pumps, including the known pump,
cmeABC (
Cj0365c-
Cj0366c-
Cj0367c) (Table
1). These genes or gene clusters
encode membrane transport proteins belonging to four families
of efflux pumps, drug metabolic transporter (DMT), MATE, MFS,
and RND. Of note is
Cj1031-
Cj1032-
Cj1033, which belongs to the
same RND family as
cmeABC and has recently been designated
cmeDEF (
34).
Sequence analysis showed similarity of Cj0035c (28% similarity) to members of the MFS bcr/cmlA subfamily, which confer bicyclomycin resistance on E. coli (21). Cj0309c, Cj0310c, Cj1173, and Cj1174 were similar (27 to 38% similarity) to an ethidium bromide resistance protein in Staphylococcus aureus (38). Cj0560 and Cj0619 were similar (21 to 32% similarity) to multidrug efflux pumps in several bacteria, including E. coli and Bacillus subtilis. Cj1031/Cj1032/Cj1033 (CmeDEF) was 36% identical to an efflux system described in Helicobacter pylori (HefA/HefB/HefC); however, this putative efflux system was shown not to play an active role in intrinsic antimicrobial resistance in H. pylori (2). Several other putative efflux pumps of Campylobacter also showed similarity to putative transport proteins in H. pylori. Specifically, Cj0560 was similar to HP1184 (26%), Cj1031 to HP0605 (25%), Cj1032 to HP0606 (36%), Cj1033 to HP0607 (37%), and Cj1241 to HP1185 (27%).
In addition, Cj1033 was 26% similar to members of the RND family, such as AcrB/AcrD/AcrF. Cj1241 was similar (26%) to a chloramphenicol resistance protein in Streptomyces lividans (5). Cj1257c and Cj1687 were 38% and 23% identical to the multidrug resistance efflux pump PmrA of Streptococcus pneumoniae (13) and the NorA quinolone resistance protein of Staphylococcus aureus (15), respectively.
Expression of putative efflux pump genes.
The presence and expression of the 10 putative efflux pump genes in C. coli strains 124 and 241 and C. jejuni strains 81-176 and 81-176ery were determined using PCR and RT-PCR. Gene contents and RNA levels varied greatly among the strains tested (Fig. 1). For example, in C. coli 124, Cj0309c-Cj0310c, Cj0560, Cj1173-Cj1174, and Cj1241 were absent from PCR amplification. Campylobacter jejuni 81-176 and its derivative 81-176ery possessed all 10 genes; however, not all genes showed bands with similar densities. Interestingly, we did not observe overexpression of any of the 10 putative efflux pumps when comparing antimicrobial-resistant to antimicrobial-susceptible strains.
Effects of gene inactivation on antimicrobial susceptibility.
The 10 putative efflux genes/operons were inactivated by inserting
Campylobacter resistance markers at specific insertion sites
(Table
1).
The antimicrobial susceptibilities of the parent and mutant strains are presented in Table 3. All four parent strains were resistant to tetracycline at MICs of
32 µg/ml. Strains 81-176ery, 124, and 241 were resistant to both ciprofloxacin and erythromycin at MICs greater than 4 and 16 µg/ml, respectively. When comparing MICs of the parent and mutant strains, the only significant change (>2-fold) in susceptibility to the four antimicrobials tested was observed for cmeB mutants, which exhibited a 4- to 256-fold decrease in the MICs of ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, and tetracycline, with erythromycin being the most significantly affected (16- to 256-fold decrease) (Table 3). For mutants with Cmr inserted, the chloramphenicol MICs were elevated to a similar level (16 to 32 µg/ml). However, in a
cmeB::Kanr mutant of C. coli 124, the chloramphenicol MIC decreased by eightfold (Table 3). In addition, the cmeB mutants reversed from resistant to susceptible phenotypes in C. coli 124 against erythromycin and tetracycline, in C. coli 241 against erythromycin, in C. jejuni 81-176 against tetracycline, and in C. jejuni 81-176ery against ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, and tetracycline. Two separate cmeB mutants of C. jejuni 81-176 with either Cmr or Kanr inserted showed no difference in susceptibility to ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, or tetracycline (Table 3). There was also no difference in susceptibility to ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, and tetracycline in Cj1033 mutants with Cmr or Kanr insertions, although the insertion orientations of these mutants were in opposite directions.
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TABLE 3. Comparison of susceptibilities of Campylobacter parent and mutant strains in the putative efflux pump inactivation study
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DNA sequence analysis of efflux mutants.
Identical
gyrA and 23S rRNA gene sequences were observed in
efflux pump mutant and parent strains, indicating that insertional
mutation events did not alter these two gene sequences. In
C. coli 124 and 241 and their respective
cmeB mutants, a point
mutation at amino acid position 86 (Thr-Ile) was identified
in the
gyrA product, whereas the products of
gyrA of
C. jejuni 81-176ery and its
cmeB mutant had a point mutation at amino
acid position 90 (Asp-Asn). Both point mutations have been shown
to be associated with ciprofloxacin resistance in
Campylobacter (
46). No point mutations in the 23S rRNA genes of
C. coli 124
and 241 and their respective
cmeB mutants were identified. Sequence
differences at 2172 (T-G) and 2334 (G-A) were detected in the
23S rRNA genes of
C. jejuni 81-176, 81-176ery, and their respective
cmeB mutants compared to the sequence in GenBank (accession
no.
U09611). These nucleotide changes may not be important for
erythromycin resistance, since they were observed in both resistant
and susceptible
C. jejuni strains, which may indicate natural
sequence polymorphisms existing in the 23S rRNA gene between
C. jejuni 81-176 and the sequenced strain
C. coli VC167 (
42).
Constructs of site-directed mutagenesis of C. jejuni gyrA and the upstream gene Cj1028c.
Mutagenesis of Cj1028c was confirmed by a single 1.65-kb PCR product from the amplification of the gene flanking the insertion site in mutant strains, approximately 800 bp greater than those of the parent strains (data not shown). The replacement of the gyrA gene by a point mutation at codon 86 was confirmed by DNA sequencing.
Effect of gyrA mutation on quinolone susceptibility in C. jejuni.
The quinolone susceptibilities of the C. jejuni gyrA mutants, along with those of derivative strains restored to the wild-type sequence, were determined by agar dilution. C. jejuni mutants (86, G-86, Cip-86m, and Gcip-86m), which incorporated the insertional mutation at Cj1028c but remained the same gyrA type as their parent strains, had no MIC changes, indicating that the insertion of Cmr in Cj1028c did not affect the susceptibility of the strain to either ciprofloxacin or nalidixic acid (Table 4). However, when gyrA Thr-86-Ile mutations were combined with the insertional mutation in Cj1028c of C. jejuni mutants (86m and G-86m), 128- and 64-fold increases in the MICs of ciprofloxacin and nalidixic acid, respectively, were observed. Interestingly, when the gyrA gene was restored to wild type (Thr-86) in ciprofloxacin-resistant strains (Cip-86 and Gcip-86), the ciprofloxacin MIC decreased 32-fold; however, the nalidixic acid MIC remained unchanged (Table 4).
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TABLE 4. MICs of CIP and NAL among C. jejuni parent strains 81-176, 81-176G, 81-176cip, and 81-176Gcip and their isogenic mutants replaced with either wild-type gyrA (Thr86) or mutated gyrA (Ile86)
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DISCUSSION
The objectives of this study were to identify efflux pump genes
that are associated with antimicrobial resistance in
Campylobacter and to determine the roles of these efflux pumps and the DNA
gyrA point mutation in fluoroquinolone resistance in
Campylobacter.
Ten putative efflux pump genes were identified based on bioinformatics
data. We were not able to amplify these genes from all
Campylobacter strains tested, indicating a diverse genetic background within
and between
C. jejuni and
C. coli. In strains that did amplify
these genes by PCR, they did not show PCR bands with the same
densities under common culture conditions. Some genes appeared
to be constitutively expressed and were common in all the strains
tested. These were the genes for Cj0035c, Cj1031/Cj1032/Cj1033,
Cj0619, and CmeABC. In addition to the 10 pumps reported in
the present study, we examined Cj1296/Cj1297/Cj1298 and Cj1375
but were not successful in generating insertional mutants. Cj1296/Cj1297/Cj1298
is a cluster of hypothetical antimicrobial efflux pumps that
is absent in
C. jejuni 81-176. Cj1375 is a putative member of
the MFS family of efflux pumps, which shared similarity with
a quinolone resistance NorA protein in
Staphylococcus aureus (
27) and Cj0035c.
We further constructed individual insertional mutations at the 10 identified loci, representing a total of 16 efflux genes. Only mutations in cmeB altered susceptibility to the tested antimicrobials, decreasing MICs by 4- to 256-fold. Additionally, cmeB inactivation in several resistant strains converted MICs to susceptible levels for ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, and tetracycline. No significant changes in MICs were associated with the other nine putative efflux pumps. These pumps may be responsible for the extrusion of antimicrobials other than the tested or nonantimicrobial substrates. Our findings support the notion that CmeABC constitutes the major multidrug efflux pump system in Campylobacter. A closely related gene cluster in the same RND familyCj1031/Cj1032/Cj1033, which also possesses structural similarity to AcrD in E. colidid not show anticipated decreases in MICs. This agrees with a recent study by Pumbwe et al. showing that Cj1033 (also termed CmeF, a component of the efflux system CmeDEF in Campylobacter) does not transport ciprofloxacin (34). In similar studies of E. coli, only acrAB or tolC mutants resulted in significant increases in susceptibilities to a broad range of antimicrobials and compounds tested (28, 41).
To confirm that the mutagenesis procedure did not affect two target genes, gyrA and 23S rRNA, in which certain point mutations are associated with ciprofloxacin and erythromycin resistance in Campylobacter, DNA sequencing of these genes of parent and mutant strains was conducted, and no change in the DNA sequences was identified. However, although no point mutations were found in 23S rRNA, the erythromycin MICs of C. coli 124 and 241 and C. jejuni 81-176ery were all above the MIC breakpoint (8 µg/ml), indicating the significant role of efflux pumps in erythromycin resistance in Campylobater. This was further confirmed by a greater decrease in erythromycin MICs after the cmeB gene was inactivated. Our results are similar to those of Mamelli et al., who reported possible efflux pump involvement in erythromycin resistance based on the finding that an efflux pump inhibitor resulted in significantly increased susceptibilities of the C. jejuni reference strain NCTC11168 and several erythromycin-resistant isolates (22).
In C. jejuni, point mutation of Thr-86-Ile in gyrA, which is homologous to Ser-83-Leu in E. coli, was predominantly observed in both clinical and laboratory-derived strains with high-level resistance to ciprofloxacin. Other reported mutations of gyrA in C. jejuni included Ala-70-Thr (46), Thr-86-Ala (low-level resistance to ciprofloxacin and high-level resistance to nalidixic acid) (1, 24), Thr-86-Lys (19), Asp-90-Asn (1, 12, 31, 32, 46), and Pro-104-Ser (12). Double mutations of gyrA combining Thr-86-Ile and Asp-85-Tyr (24), or Asp-90-Asn (12, 31) or Pro-104-Ser (12, 32), have been reported. The role of mutation in gyrB has also been examined (1, 31, 32) but is not yet documented in Campylobacter. Mutation of Arg-139-Gln in parC has been reported in C. jejuni by Gibreel et al. (10); however, subsequent studies reported by other investigators failed to confirm that Campylobacter possesses a parC gene (1, 19, 29, 32). Despite all these observations, direct genetic evidence showing the cause-effect relationship between gyrA mutation and fluoroquinolone resistance in Campylobacter is lacking.
We adopted an insertional-mutagenesis method and introduced a Campylobacter Cmr cassette and a point mutation of gyrA at the chromosomal level to examine the effects of such alterations on the susceptibilities of C. jejuni to fluoroquinolones. It appears that the insertion of a Cmr cassette into the gyrA upstream gene Cj1028c did not have any detectable effect on the susceptibility of C. jejuni strains to either ciprofloxacin or nalidixic acid. Point mutation at codon 86 of gyrA significantly increased the MICs of the drugs for C. jejuni mutants. In addition, when the wild-type gyrA allele replaced the mutated copy in fluoroquinolone-resistant C. jejuni strains, the MICs showed significant decreases, although to a lesser extent for ciprofloxacin. This clearly demonstrated a direct causal effect between the Thr-86-Ile point mutation in gyrA and fluoroquinolone resistance.
In this study, we also conducted an in vitro spontaneous-mutation selection procedure for the parent strains C. jejuni 81-176 and 81-176G. As expected, C. jejuni 81-176cip and 81-176Gcip acquired 1,024- and 32- to 64-fold increases in the MICs of ciprofloxacin and nalidixic acid, respectively, and both strains possessed double mutations at codons 86 and 90 in gyrA. When point mutation of gyrA codon 86 was introduced into the parent strains C. jejuni 81-176 and 81-176G, 128- and 32- to 64-fold increases were observed in the MICs of ciprofloxacin and nalidixic acid, respectively. The difference in changes of ciprofloxacin MICs between induction and genetic-manipulation mutants indicated that double mutations at both codons resulted in higher MICs and, more significantly, that other mechanisms, such as overexpression of efflux pumps, may have been involved during the induction procedure. In the study reported by Pumbwe et al., 9 out of 32 multidrug-resistant C. jejuni isolates had a mutation at CmeR (Cj0368c, a putative regulator for CmeABC) and overexpressed CmeB and 8 out of 32 were ciprofloxacin resistant but had no mutation in gyrA (34).
To our knowledge, this is the first study that has examined the effect of cmeABC gene inactivation in Campylobacter wild-type strains resistant to clinically important drugs, ciprofloxacin and erythromycin, as well as in C. coli. Our findings provided genetic evidence that CmeABC is an important efflux pump in antimicrobial resistance in Campylobacter; that a single point mutation, Thr-86-Ile, can render Campylobacter resistant to fluoroquinolones; and that these two mechanisms work synergistically in conferring antimicrobial resistance on Campylobacter.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are indebted to Robert Walker, from the Division of Animal
and Food Microbiology, Center for Veterinary Medicine, Food
and Drug Administration, for his review and comments in the
preparation of this article.
This study was supported in part by grants from the Joint Institute for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition of the University of Maryland and the FDA.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Nutrition and Food Science, 0112 Skinner Building, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742. Phone: (301) 405-1399. Fax: (301) 314-3313. E-mail:
jmeng{at}umd.edu.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, August 2005, p. 3347-3354, Vol. 49, No. 8
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