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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, June 2007, p. 2185-2188, Vol. 51, No. 6
0066-4804/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.01439-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
SCO-1, a Novel Plasmid-Mediated Class A ß-Lactamase with Carbenicillinase Characteristics from Escherichia coli
C. C. Papagiannitsis,1
A. Loli,1
L. S. Tzouvelekis,2
E. Tzelepi,1
G. Arlet,3 and
V. Miriagou1*
Laboratory of Bacteriology, Institut Pasteur Hellenique,1
Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Athens, Athens, Greece,2
Laboratoire de Bacteriologie, UPRES EA 2392, UFR Saint-Antoine, Universite Paris VI, Paris, France3
Received 17 November 2006/
Returned for modification 9 February 2007/
Accepted 5 March 2007

ABSTRACT
A novel class A ß-lactamase (SCO-1) encoded by an
80-kb self-transferable plasmid from
Escherichia coli is described.
The interaction of SCO-1 with ß-lactams was similar
to that of the CARB-type enzymes. Also, SCO-1 exhibited a 51%
amino acid sequence identity with the RTG subgroup of chromosomal
carbenicillinases (RTG-1, CARB-5, and CARB-8).

TEXT
Production of ß-lactamases is the main mechanism of
resistance to ß-lactam antibiotics, particularly among
gram-negative microorganisms (
19). Based on their amino acid
sequences, ß-lactamases have been divided into the
molecular classes A, C, and D that include active serine enzymes
and the molecular class B enzymes that require zinc ions for
activity. Class A comprises numerous clavulanate-inhibited enzymes
from a wide range of bacterial species. Despite their structural
similarities, class A ß-lactamases exhibit an ample
diversity of substrate spectra and have been classified into
various functional groups (
3). The CARB- and PSE-type ß-lactamases
represent a distinct functional group (2c) of class A penicillinases
that preferentially hydrolyze carbenicillin (the carbenicillinases).
These ß-lactamases are encountered mostly in
Pseudomonas aeruginosa (
6,
18), as well as in other obligate aerobes such
as
Acinetobacter baumannii (
5,
11),
Vibrio cholerae (
4,
15,
17), and
Alcaligenes xylosoxidans (
7). Carbenicillinases also
occur in members of the family
Enterobacteriaceae at relatively
low frequencies (
20,
24). In this study, we describe SCO-1,
a novel plasmid-mediated class A enzyme with carbenicillinase
characteristics, produced by
Escherichia coli.
Selection and properties of SCO-1-producing Escherichia coli.
From a PCR-based screening using primers specific for various bla genes, including blaTEM, blaSHV, blaCARB, blaCTX-M, blaCMY, blaACC, and blaOXA of oxyimino-cephalosporin-resistant E. coli isolates recovered from patients in Athens hospitals during 2000 to 2004, an isolate (EC-3521r) positive for blaACC and also blaTEM was identified. E. coli EC-3521r was isolated in 2002 from a urine sample from a patient treated in a general hospital. Partial sequencing of the PCR products confirmed the identity of the bla genes (data not shown). A blaACC-type cephalosporinase gene was detected for the first time in this setting. Thus, E. coli EC-3521r was studied further.
MICs of ß-lactam antibiotics were determined by an agar dilution technique. E. coli EC-3521r exhibited a ß-lactam resistance phenotype consistent with the production of an ACC-type enzyme (2) (Table 1). Analysis of the ß-lactamase content by isoelectric focusing (IEF) of sonicated cell extracts indicated that the isolate produced three main ß-lactamase species with pIs of 7.8 (corresponding to ACC-1 [2]), 5.4 (corresponding to TEM-1), and 5.8. The last band, along with TEM-1, was inhibited in situ by clavulanic acid (3 µM).
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TABLE 1. MICs of ß-lactam antibiotics for clinical and laboratory E. coli strains carrying SCO-1-encoding plasmids
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Conjugal transfer of blaSCO-1 and plasmid characterization.
Mating experiments were performed in mixed broth cultures as
described previously (
10), using a rifampin-resistant
E. coli K-12
lac mutant strain (29R793) as the recipient. ß-Lactam-resistant
transconjugants were selected with Mueller-Hinton agar containing
rifampin (150 µg/ml) and ampicillin (40 µg/ml).
The ß-lactam resistance phenotype of EC-3521r was
readily transferred (Table
1) at a frequency of approximately
10
4 per donor cell. Transconjugant clones also acquired
resistance to streptomycin and chloramphenicol, as found by
a disk diffusion test. Analysis of plasmid DNA content of the
donor and the transconjugant clones by an alkaline lysis technique
(
10) indicated transfer of an 80-kb plasmid designated pR3521.
Purified DNA preparations from pR3521 were positive for
blaTEM and
blaACC by PCR assays. As also found by IEF, pR3521-harboring
transconjugants produced the same three main ß-lactamases
as the donor strain did. These data showed that pR3521 encoded
multiple ß-lactamases, including an unidentified enzyme
that was inhibited by clavulanic acid and that had an apparent
pI of 5.8.
Cloning and sequencing of blaSCO-1.
Plasmid pR3521 was partially digested with the endonuclease Sau3A, and the fragments were ligated into the polycloning site of the pBCSK(+) vector (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). The resulting recombinant plasmids were used to transform E. coli DH5
competent cells by electroporation. Transformants were selected with medium supplemented with chloramphenicol (20 µg/ml) and ampicillin (40 µg/ml). ß-Lactam-resistant clones were analyzed by IEF as well as by PCR for blaTEM and blaACC. A clone that produced only the ß-lactamase species with a pI of 5.8 and that was negative for blaTEM and blaACC was identified. Determination of MICs of ß-lactams showed that this clone was resistant to penicillins but not to cephalosporins. MICs of penicillins were decreased by clavulanic acid and tazobactam (Table 1). The respective recombinant plasmid (pSCO-1) was purified with a Plasmid Midi kit (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany), and the nucleotide sequence of the bla-carrying insert was determined on both strands by using an ABI 377 sequencer (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). pSCO-1 carried a 3,833-bp Sau3A fragment containing an open reading frame (ORF) of 867 bp (from nucleotide [nt] 1494 to nt 2360; GenBank accession no. EF104648), homologous to the orf1 recently observed in ACC-1-encoding plasmids from Klebsiella pneumoniae and Salmonella enterica serovar Bareilly, isolated in France and The Netherlands, respectively (from nt 2809 to nt 3675; GenBank accession no. AJ870922) (8). This ORF did not exhibit significant homology with any known sequence. However, the deduced polypeptide (288 amino acid [aa] residues) possessed the typical motifs of a class A ß-lactamase (14). Therefore, orf1 was identified as a bla gene and designated blaSCO-1.
The 867-bp-long blaSCO-1 gene had a G+C content of 51.9%. The codon adaptation index (CAI) (21) was 0.657. Putative 35 (TTTAGA) and 10 (TAAATT) promoter regions, separated by 19 bp, were found in the sequence preceding blaSCO-1. An ORF of 1,200 bp (G+C content, 48.7%; CAI, 0.632) in the opposite orientation was located 162 bp upstream of blaSCO-1. The deduced polypeptide (399 aa) contained motifs typical for the family 5 glycosidases (cellulases) and was 53% similar to a glycosidase from Pseudomonas putida (GenBank accession no. NC002947). Homologies of the remaining right-hand sequence (113 bp) of the Sau3A insert with published sequences were not detected. At a 547-bp distance downstream of blaSCO-1, an intact IS26 element (820 bp), including tnpA and the respective inverted repeats IRL and IRR, was identified. The IS26 sequence was bracketed by sequences of 120 bp (on the left) and 362 bp (on the right), corresponding to internal fragments of a putative transposase (tnpB) and a resolvase (tnpR) gene, respectively. Both genes were described in the strA-strB-containing regions from S. enterica serovar Typhimurium DT193 (GenBank accession no. AY524415) and the Tn5393 transposon from Erwinia amylovora (GenBank accession no. M96392), respectively (Fig. 1).
Characteristics of SCO-1.
The likely secretory signal sequence of SCO-1 comprised 25 amino
acid residues. The mature ß-lactamase (263 aa) would
have a molecular mass of 28,097 kDa. The calculated pI (5.8)
matched the apparent pI of the native form. SCO-1 contained
the conserved amino acid residues of class A ß-lactamases,
including Ser-70, Lys-73, Ser-130, Asn-132, and Glu-166 (Ambler
et al.'s numbering scheme [
1]) (
14). A BLASTP search showed
that SCO-1 was distantly related to CARB-type ß-lactamases,
exhibiting the highest similarity scores with the chromosomal
carbenicillinases RTG-1 from
Proteus mirabilis GN79 (51% identity)
(
20), CARB-5 from
A. calcoaceticus subsp.
anitratus (51% identity)
(
5), and CARB-8 from
Oligella urethralis (51% identity) (
13).
Identities with other group 2c ß-lactamases ranged
from 45 to 47%. Position 234 was occupied by an arginine residue,
which is characteristic for the CARB-type ß-lactamases
and is considered important for carbenicillinase activity (
12).
Additionally, SCO-1 contained Thr-235 as RTG-1, CARB-5 (RTG-2),
and CARB-8 (RTG-3) (Fig.
2). The latter carbenicillinases are
evolutionarily distinct from the remaining CARB enzymes and
constitute the so-called RTG subgroup (
5). A potential phylogenetic
relationship of SCO-1 with the RTG carbenicillinases was also
indicated in a dendrogram constructed by the neighbor-joining
method based on a ClustalW multiple alignment (not shown).
Hydrolysis rates of penicillin G, ampicillin, carbenicillin,
oxacillin, cephalothin, cephaloridine, cefotaxime, and ceftazidime
by SCO-1 were determined by UV spectrophotometry, as described
previously (
10). Cell extracts from
E. coli K-12 laboratory
strains producing CARB-1 (PSE-4) and TEM-1 were also used for
comparison. The substrate profile of SCO-1 corresponded to those
of the carbenicillinases of the functional group 2c (
3). The
enzyme was effective against ampicillin and carbenicillin, while
the relative hydrolysis rates of cephalothin and cephaloridine
were low. Also, as observed for most CARB ß-lactamases,
hydrolysis of oxacillin by SCO-1 was relatively slow. The inhibitory
activities of clavulanic acid, tazobactam, and sulbactam were
assessed using penicillin G as the reporter substrate (
10).
Tazobactam was the most potent inhibitor of SCO-1, followed
by clavulanic acid and sulbactam (Table
2).
Conclusions.
The data presented here show that SCO-1 is a novel class A ß-lactamase
functionally related to the group 2c enzymes. Also, a phylogenetic
relationship of SCO-1 with the CARB ß-lactamases,
particularly those of the RTG subgroup, was evident. However,
the relevant amino acid sequence identities were limited, suggesting
a distinct origin of SCO-1. Unlike the
bla genes of the RTG
subgroup, which are chromosomal,
blaSCO-1 was carried by a self-transferable
plasmid. On the other hand,
blaSCO-1 occurred as part of an
apparently contiguous chromosomal sequence, as indicated by
its association with a glycosidase-like gene. Diverse carbenicillinase-like
ß-lactamases with limited amino acid sequence homologies
with CARB enzymes have been described in
V. harveyi (
23),
Moritella marina (
22), and
Fulvimarina pelagi (GenBank accession no. EAU43273)
from aquatic environments. Therefore,
blaSCO-1 might have been
derived from an unidentified environmental microorganism. The
association of the described sequence with IS
26, an element
that is frequently involved in the mobilization of
bla and other
resistance genes (
9,
16), could play a role in the acquisition
of
blaSCO-1 by pR3521. Irrespective of its origin, SCO-1 is
the first RTG-type carbenicillinase known to be encoded by a
plasmid.
A retrospective examination of our oxyimino-cephalosporin-resistant E. coli collection by PCR did not reveal additional isolates positive for blaSCO-1. This collection, however, represents a small fraction of the penicillin-resistant isolates. Therefore, the extent of spread of blaSCO-1 cannot be estimated. Isolation of other enterobacteria that also harbor blaSCO-1-carrying plasmids from other European countries (8) may be of epidemiological importance. Although the sequences bracketing blaSCO-1 were different from those described here, these plasmids also carried blaACC-1 and blaTEM-1 and therefore were probably related to pR3521. Despite its seemingly low prevalence among clinical enterobacteria, this plasmid type may have achieved a geographically wide dispersal. It would be interesting to examine additional ACC-1-encoding plasmids for blaSCO-1 carriage isolated from enterobacteria in other regions.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
Nucleotide sequences described in this study have been assigned accession no. EF104648 in the GenBank database.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory of Bacteriology, Institut Pasteur Hellenique, Vas. Sofias 127, Athens 11521, Greece. Phone: 30-210-6478810. Fax: 30-210-6423498. E-mail:
miriagou{at}mail.pasteur.gr 
Published ahead of print on 12 March 2007. 

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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, June 2007, p. 2185-2188, Vol. 51, No. 6
0066-4804/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.01439-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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