Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, April 2008, p. 1285-1290, Vol. 52, No. 4
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.01457-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Institute of Microbiology and Biomedical Sciences, Polytechnic University of Marche Medical School, 60020 Ancona, Italy
Received 9 November 2007/ Returned for modification 7 January 2008/ Accepted 6 February 2008
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
Tn1545, the first of these elements described, originally detected in multiply resistant S. pneumoniae strain BM4200, and reported to have a size of 25.3 kb (12, 13), is a transposon carrying the resistance genes tet(M) (tetracycline), erm(B) (macrolide, lincosamide, and streptogramin B antibiotics), and aphA-3 (kanamycin and structurally related aminoglycosides). Its genetic organization has been analyzed essentially by restriction mapping (3); only specific portions have been sequenced (4, 5, 22, 28, 34).
Tn3872 (reported size, 23.3 kb) is a composite element resulting from the insertion of the erm(B)-containing Tn917 transposon (33) into Tn916 (23).
Tn6002 is a 20.9-kb element resulting from the insertion of a ca. 2.8-kb erm(B)-containing DNA fragment [erm(B) element] into Tn916 (2, 10). Tn6002 was originally detected in Streptococcus cristatus and designated Tn916Erm, but it has not been published even though its complete sequence has been available in GenBank since 2005 (accession no. AY898750). In S. pneumoniae isolates, Tn6002 may also be part of composite transposon Tn2010 (26.3 kb) (14).
Tn6003 (25.1 kb)—unlike Tn3872 and Tn6002 and similar to Tn1545—also carries, besides the tetracycline [tet(M)] and erythromycin [erm(B)] resistance determinants, the kanamycin resistance gene aphA-3. In Tn6003, aphA-3 has been shown to be contained in a 4.2-kb insertion called the MAS (macrolide-aminoglycoside-streptothricin) element, also containing a second erm(B) gene (10).
All of these erm(B)-carrying elements are derivatives of Tn916, a ubiquitous 18.0-kb transposon originally detected in Enterococcus faecalis (17), that confers tetracycline resistance via the tet(M) gene on a wide range of clinically important (especially gram-positive) bacteria (8, 29). As we recently showed, a minority of both S. pneumoniae (10) and Streptococcus pyogenes (2) isolates with erm(B)-mediated erythromycin resistance are tetracycline susceptible because the tet(M) gene is silent.
The present study, by comparatively analyzing the genetic organization of erm(B)-carrying transposons in S. pneumoniae reference strains and investigating their distribution in tetracycline-resistant clinical isolates, shows a substantial correspondence between Tn1545 and Tn6003, while Tn6002 appears to be the most common Tn916-related transposon in pneumococci.
|
|
|---|
A collection of 83 erythromycin- and tetracycline-resistant nonreplicate clinical isolates of S. pneumoniae, all recovered in different areas of Italy in 2005 to 2006 and carrying erm(B) as the sole erythromycin resistance gene, was used to investigate the distribution of the different transposons.
Antibiotics and susceptibility tests.
Erythromycin, tetracycline, and kanamycin were purchased from Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO. Erythromycin and tetracycline MICs were determined by agar dilution as recommended by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (9). Kanamycin susceptibility was determined by agar diffusion using the disk drug content (1,000 µg) and breakpoints (susceptible,
14 mm; resistant, <10 mm) recommended by the French Society for Microbiology (http://www.sfm.asso.fr).
Serotyping. All isolates were serotyped by the capsular-swelling test with specific antisera (Statens Seruminstitut, Copenhagen, Denmark). Serotypes were indicated with conventional capsular type designations.
PFGE. Macrorestriction with SmaI endonuclease (New England BioLabs, Beverly, MA) and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) analysis were performed and the relevant patterns were examined and compared as described elsewhere (30). For clusters with at least two isolates, types were designated with lowercase letters in order of size.
Amplification experiments. The principal primer pairs used in this study are shown in Table 1. Other primer pairs used to detect particular genes or to analyze transposon structures have been reported elsewhere (10, 11). DNA preparation and amplification and electrophoresis of PCR products were carried out by established procedures as described previously (11). DNAs from the reference strains carrying specific transposons were used as specific controls.
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Principal oligonucleotide primer pairs used in this studya
|
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. Two regions of transposon Tn1545 newly sequenced from S. pneumoniae reference strain BM4200 were submitted to the GenBank/EMBL sequence database and assigned accession no. AM889142 (the O6/TETM2dg amplicon) and AM903082 (the J12/J11 amplicon). The sequence of transposon Tn6003, previously determined only for the region corresponding to the J12/J11 amplicon (10), is now entirely available under the same accession number (AM410044).
|
|
|---|
The main results of PCR assays are summarized in Table 2, where the Tn916 type structure is subdivided into five regions from the left end to the right end [(i) orf24 to orf20, (ii) orf20 to orf19, (iii) orf18 to orf15, (iv) orf15 to tet(M), and (v) tet(M) to int], analyzed, and compared with appropriate primers. (i) No differences were found in the DNA regions of the five reference transposons between the left end (orf24) and orf20. (ii) Between orf20 and orf19, only Tn3872 exhibited the same PCR-based structure as Tn916. Tn6002 showed the insertion of the 2.8-kb erm(B) element (accession no. AY898750; 10, 14), whereas an insertion of ca. 7.1 kb, corresponding in Tn6003 to the 4.2-kb MAS element, in turn inserted into the erm(B) fragment (10), was likewise detected in Tn1545. (iii) No differences were found in the DNA regions of the five reference transposons between orf18 and orf15. (iv) Between orf15 and tet(M), only Tn1545 exhibited a PCR-based structure different from that of Tn916, due to a ca. 1.2-kb insertion that additional PCR experiments (not shown) indicated to be situated between orf13 and tet(M). (v) Between tet(M) and the right end (int) of the five reference transposons, only Tn3872 differed from Tn916, due to the insertion of the Tn917 transposon (ca. 5.3 kb) (23).
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Comparison of the amplicons obtained from reference pneumococci carrying different Tn916 family transposons with specific primer pairs
|
Two new regions of Tn1545 were sequenced from reference strain BM4200, namely, the J12/J11 amplicon (spanning from orf20 to the intergenic region between orf19 and orf18; accession no. AM903082) and the O6/TETM2dg amplicon [spanning from orf13 to tet(M); accession no. AM889142]. The J12/J11 amplicon (7,874 bp) was virtually identical (99.7% homology) to the one sequenced in Tn6003 from reference strain Ar4 (accession no. AM410044) (10); in particular, its right portion contained the erm(B) element (99.6% and 99.4% homology to Tn6003 and Tn6002, respectively), and its left portion contained the MAS element (99.7% homology to Tn6003). Remarkably, the second erm(B) gene of the MAS element lacked the stop codon, exactly like that found in Tn6003 (10). The O6/TETM2dg amplicon displayed a 1,245-bp insertion (accession no. AM889142) between orf13 and orf12, containing a putative IS1239 insertion sequence with a transposase-encoding open reading frame (ORF) of 951 bp flanked by direct repeats. This insertion, found in Tn1545 but not in Tn6003, was the sole dissimilarity between these two closely related transposons. The right portion of the amplicon contained the tet(M) gene with its regulatory region, whose homologies to the corresponding segment were as follows: 100% for Tn1545 from E. faecalis BM4127, 99.5% for Tn6003 from reference strain Ar4 (tetracycline susceptible), and 99.8% for Tn6003 from a randomly selected strain from the six tetracycline-resistant pneumococci of this study, which yielded a 7.9-kb amplicon with primer pair J12/J11. Neither Tn6003 nor Tn6002 had an EcoRI endonuclease restriction site, as demonstrated for Tn1545 since the earliest studies (12).
The maps of Tn916 and Tn916 family erm(B)-carrying transposons Tn3872, Tn6002, Tn6003, and Tn1545 are represented and compared in Fig. 1.
![]() View larger version (48K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Comparative representation of the ORF maps of Tn916 and Tn916 family erm(B)/tet(M)-carrying transposons Tn3872, Tn6002, Tn6003, and Tn1545. White arrows indicate Tn916 ORFs other than tet(M) (striped). Dark gray arrows indicate ORFs from Tn917 other than erm(B) (checkered). Black arrows indicate ORFs from the ca. 2.8-kb erm(B) element, except for erm(B) (checkered). Light gray arrows indicate ORFs from the ca. 4.2-kb MAS element (10), except for erm(B) (checkered). A spotted arrow indicates the ORF encoding a putative IS1239 transposase detected in Tn1545 of the reference pneumococcus BM4200. Gray areas between ORF maps indicate areas of homology to Tn916. It should be noted that only the sizes of Tn916 (18,032 bp), Tn6002 (20,880 bp), and Tn6003 (25,101 bp) are the result of sequence analysis and are therefore accurate. In fact, the actual size of Tn1545 is likely to be approximately 1 kb greater than the 25.3 kb reported originally (3, 12, 13), the sole difference from Tn6003 appearing to be a 1,245-bp insertion.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 3. Phenotypic and molecular characteristics of the 83 tested pneumococcal isolates, grouped according to the erm(B)/tet(M) genetic element carried
|
Twenty different serotypes (14 represented by at least two isolates) were detected. The most common was 23F (n = 15), followed by 3 (n = 13), 6B (n = 10), 19A (n = 8), 19F (n = 8), and 14 (n = 5). Fifty-seven PFGE types (15 represented by at least two isolates) were detected. Type a, the most common, included seven isolates.
An erm(B)/tet(M) linkage was detected in all 83 isolates, which were all positive for the xis gene. The genetic organization of transposon Tn3872, confirmed by positive PCRs for tnpR and tnpA, was detected in 18 isolates; that of Tn6002 in 59 isolates; and that of Tn6003 in the 6 kanamycin-resistant isolates. Interestingly, different transposons were often carried by isolates with the same PFGE profile. The genetic organization of transposon Tn1545, with its specific insertion, was detected in none of the isolates. It is worth noting that the putative IS1239 insertion sequence was found neither in the Tn6003 and Tn6002 elements of the tetracycline-resistant isolates of this study nor in those of the tetracycline-susceptible isolates investigated previously (10).
Conclusions. This study elucidates the complete organization and structure of Tn1545—the first erm(B)-carrying transposon to be described in S. pneumoniae—and shows that the erm(B)-carrying elements [bearing an expressed tet(M) gene] of tetracycline-resistant pneumococci substantially correspond to those [bearing a silent tet(M) gene] recently detected in tetracycline-susceptible pneumococci (10). Such transposons, though often presenting a number of variants and minor differences, substantially fit into one of two groups (probably also denoting different origins or evolutions), depending on the erm(B)-carrying fragment. In one group (Tn3872), erm(B) is contained in the Tn917 transposon, inserted into orf9 of Tn916 at base 14525 of its published sequence (accession no. U09422); this group is typically associated with positive PCRs for tnpR and tnpA, the transposase genes of Tn917. In the other group (Tn6002, Tn6003, and Tn1545), erm(B) is contained in the erm(B) element, inserted at base 3847 of the Tn916 sequence. This insertion distinguishes Tn6002, whereas the further insertion of the MAS element [containing a second erm(B) gene] at base 4110 of the published sequence of Tn6002 (accession no. AY898750) distinguishes Tn6003/Tn1545. It should be noted that a PCR with primer pair J12/J11 is sufficient to distinguish among Tn3872, Tn6002, and Tn6003/Tn1545, which yield amplicons of 0.8 kb, 3.7 kb, and 7.9 kb, respectively (Table 1). Tn6003 and Tn1545 can be distinguished with primer pair O6/TETM2dg (amplicons of 2.4 kb and 3.6 kb, respectively).
Curiously, although its prevalence may obviously vary from area to area and over time, the first-described erm(B)-carrying transposon of the Tn916 family, i.e., Tn1545, was never detected in our isolates, and its variant lacking the IS1239 insertion sequence, i.e., Tn6003, was the least common of the pneumococcal erm(B)-carrying Tn916-related elements. Indeed, in terms of frequency, Tn6002 seems to rank first (roughly from half to two-thirds) among both tetracycline-susceptible (10) and tetracycline-resistant pneumococci, followed by Tn3872, while Tn6003 consistently ranks last. Kanamycin resistance, or the presence of the aphA-3 gene, has usually been ignored in most epidemiological surveys of erythromycin-resistant pneumococci; however, the few studies addressing the point confirm that kanamycin resistance is associated with a tiny minority of erm(B)-carrying isolates (6, 18, 19, 31).
This work was partly supported by the Italian Ministry of University and Research.
Published ahead of print on 19 February 2008. ![]()
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»