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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, August 2008, p. 2813-2817, Vol. 52, No. 8
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.00342-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Rifampin and Rifaximin Resistance in Clinical Isolates of Clostridium difficile
,
Jennifer R. O'Connor,1
Minerva A. Galang,2,
Susan P. Sambol,1
David W. Hecht,1,2
Gayatri Vedantam,1,2
Dale N. Gerding,1,2 and
Stuart Johnson1,2*
Hines Veterans Affairs Hospital, Hines, Illinois,1
Loyola University Medical Center and Loyola University Stritch School of Medicine, Maywood, Illinois2
Received 11 March 2008/
Returned for modification 22 April 2008/
Accepted 5 June 2008

ABSTRACT
Rifaximin, a poorly absorbed rifamycin derivative, is a promising
alternative for the treatment of
Clostridium difficile infections.
Resistance to this agent has been reported, but no commercial
test for rifaximin resistance exists and the molecular basis
of this resistance has not been previously studied in
C. difficile.
To evaluate whether the rifampin Etest would be a suitable substitute
for rifaximin susceptibility testing in the clinical setting,
we analyzed the in vitro rifaximin susceptibilities of 80 clinical
isolates from our collection by agar dilution and compared these
results to rifampin susceptibility results obtained by agar
dilution and Etest. We found rifaximin susceptibility data to
agree with rifampin susceptibility; the MICs of both antimicrobials
for all isolates were either very low or very high. Fourteen
rifaximin-resistant (MIC,

32 µg/ml) unique isolates from
patients at diverse locations in three countries were identified.
Molecular typing analysis showed that nine (64%) of these isolates
belonged to the epidemic BI/NAP1/027 group that is responsible
for multiple outbreaks and increased disease severity in the
United Kingdom, Europe, and North America. The molecular basis
of rifaximin and rifampin resistance in these isolates was investigated
by sequence analysis of
rpoB, which encodes the β subunit
of RNA polymerase, the target of rifamycins. Resistance-associated
rpoB sequence differences that resulted in specific amino acid
substitutions in an otherwise conserved region of RpoB were
found in all resistant isolates. Seven different RpoB amino
acid substitutions were identified in the resistant isolates,
which were divided into five distinct groups by restriction
endonuclease analysis typing. These results suggest that the
amino acid substitutions associated with rifamycin resistance
were independently derived rather than disseminated from specific
rifamycin-resistant clones. We propose that rifaximin resistance
in
C. difficile results from mutations in RpoB and that rifampin
resistance predicts rifaximin resistance for this organism.

INTRODUCTION
In recent years, the incidence and severity of
Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) has increased significantly. Numerous
C. difficile outbreaks in North America, the United Kingdom, and Europe have
been caused by the BI/NAP1/027 epidemic group. This clonal group
of isolates, which has been characterized by restriction endonuclease
analysis (REA), pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, and PCR ribotyping,
is described as hypervirulent due to the associated increase
in disease severity compared to nonepidemic isolates (
12,
13,
21,
24). Treatment failures and CDI recurrences appear to be
more frequent as well, which highlights the need for the development
of new therapeutic strategies (
20). Rifaximin, a poorly absorbed
rifamycin derivative with broad efficacy across the gram-positive
and gram-negative spectra, has been approved in the United States
for the treatment of traveler's diarrhea and is being evaluated
for the treatment of CDI (
8,
11). Several studies have investigated
the efficacy of rifaximin against
C. difficile in vitro and
in vivo, and although rifaximin appears to have good activity
against most
C. difficile isolates, some strains for which the
MICs are high have been identified (
7,
11,
15).
Antimicrobials belonging to the rifamycin group, including rifampin and rifaximin, inhibit protein synthesis in bacteria by binding to RpoB, the β subunit of RNA polymerase (6). Studies of a variety of bacterial genera have shown that exposure to rifamycins in vitro and in vivo can lead to the selection of resistant organisms, which carry specific single amino acid mutations within RpoB (5, 10, 17, 23). These mutations have been systematically mapped in Staphylococcus aureus and Mycobacterium tuberculosis RpoB and occur within a defined region of the protein (17, 19). X-ray crystallography analysis of Thermus aquaticus RpoB complexed with rifampin provided an explanation for the locations of the specific mutations found in rifamycin-resistant organisms (2). In three-dimensional space, the RpoB amino acids that confer rifamycin resistance either directly interact with rifampin or are in close proximity to those that are involved in rifampin interactions (2). However, it is not known whether C. difficile strains for which the rifaximin MICs are high carry RpoB amino acid substitutions characteristic of other rifamycin-resistant bacteria.
We hypothesized that C. difficile isolates for which the MICs of rifaximin are high would be differentiated from isolates for which the MICs are low by specific RpoB amino acid substitutions. In addition, we hypothesized that the rifampin susceptibility and rifaximin susceptibility results for these isolates would be in agreement. Therefore, commercially available rifampin susceptibility test kits could be used to predict the rifaximin susceptibility of C. difficile isolates in the clinical setting.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
C. difficile isolates.
A total of 80 unique patient isolates were selected from our
C. difficile collection as follows. Sixteen isolates (4 rifaximin
resistant [MICs,

32 µg/ml] and 12 nonresistant [MICs,
<32 µg/ml]) were selected from previous analyses in
which rifaximin susceptibility testing was performed (
7,
11).
Two rifaximin-resistant isolates were obtained from the clinical
practice of one us (S. Johnson, unpublished data).
The remaining 62 isolates were obtained from patients enrolled in a multicenter clinical treatment trial, which compared the efficacy of the toxin-binding polymer tolevamer to vancomycin and metronidazole for the treatment of CDI (14). The study was conducted in the United States and Canada with patients enrolled from 2005 to 2007 (14). This sample of 62 isolates had not previously been tested for susceptibility. If two or more isolates were obtained from the same patient, had the same susceptibility profile, and could not be differentiated at the molecular level, only one representative was included in our study. All of the C. difficile isolates in this study were characterized by HindIII REA as previously described (3).
Susceptibility testing.
Agar dilution susceptibility testing was performed as previously described, by using the Clinical and Laboratory and Standards Institute-recommended reference agar dilution method for anaerobes (4, 7). Rifaximin (Salix Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Morrisville, NC) was dissolved in methanol and then diluted in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) plus 0.45% sodium dodecyl sulfate. Rifampin (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) was dissolved in methanol and diluted in water. The range of rifaximin concentrations tested was 0.0009 to 256 µg/ml. The range of rifampin concentrations tested was 0.00001 to 256 µg/ml. The interpretation of endpoints was conducted according to Clinical and Laboratory and Standards Institute guideline M11-A7, and C. difficile ATCC 70005 was used as a control (4). Rifampin Etests were performed according to the manufacturer's instructions (AB Biodisk, Solna, Sweden), with brucella blood agar (Anaerobe Systems, San Jose, CA). The range of rifampin MICs detected by Etest was 0.002 to 32 µg/ml. Although no susceptibility or resistance breakpoints have been determined for rifaximin or rifampin against anaerobes, we designated isolates for which the MICs were
32 µg/ml resistant.
Identification of sequence differences in the rpoB gene.
The rpoB gene of C. difficile QCD-32g58 (accession no. NZ_AAML04000015) was identified by a BLASTn search of the database for that sequence (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genomes/geblast.cgi?gi=5410) by using the rpoB gene from C. difficile strain 630 as the query sequence (accession no. NC_009089.1) (1). C. difficile QCD-32g58 rpoB was then used as the template for designing oligonucleotide primers. PCR amplification and sequencing of rpoB were carried out on 19 C. difficile isolates by using primers listed in Table 1 and the FailSafe PCR system with reaction buffer E, according to the manufacturer's recommendations (Epicenter Biotechnologies, Madison, WI). Amplicons were either directly purified from the PCR or gel purified, as required (Qiagen Inc., Valencia CA). The entire rpoB gene was sequenced from eight strains (four resistant and four nonresistant isolates). The genomic DNA templates for these experiments were prepared as previously described (18).
PCR amplification and sequencing of the genomic region corresponding
to amino acids 136 to 550 of RpoB were conducted for 10 rifaximin-resistant
isolates and 1 nonresistant isolate with the primers listed
in Table
1. This amino acid sequence corresponds to the defined
region of RpoB in
S. aureus and
M. tuberculosis where mutations
leading to rifamycin resistance commonly occur (
17). DNAs were
extracted from overnight agar cultures of these 11 isolates
by resuspending
C. difficile cells in 50 µl sterile deionized
water until the suspension was visibly turbid. The suspension
was boiled for 10 min, incubated on ice for 5 min, and then
centrifuged at 22,000
x g at 4°C for 10 min, and the supernatant
was used in a PCR. Ten microliters of the crude DNA preparation
was used in each reaction mixture, with a final volume of 50
µl. DNA sequencing was carried out at the DNA Services
Facility, Research Resources Center, University of Illinois
at Chicago.

RESULTS
Rifaximin and rifampin MICs for C. difficile isolates are comparable.
Rifampin and rifaximin MICs determined by agar dilution and
rifampin MICs obtained by Etest were consistent. The MICs of
both rifamycin derivatives were either high (>32 µg/ml)
or low MICs (

0.002 µg/ml) by both susceptibility testing
methods. None of the MICs fell within the range of 0.002 to
32 µg/ml. The rifampin and rifaximin MICs were >32
µg/ml for 14 of the 80 unique patient isolates.
Most rifaximin-resistant isolates were from epidemic REA group BI.
Nine of the 14 isolates that were resistant to rifampin and rifaximin (MICs, >32 µg/ml) were typed as epidemic REA group BI. This REA group is responsible for the large North American and European outbreaks reported in previous studies (13, 16, 24). These 9 resistant BI isolates accounted for all of the resistant isolates identified within the group of 62 from the tolevamer study (14). The overall proportion of BI group isolates in this 62-isolate sample was 51.6%. The remaining five resistant isolates were typed as REA group R (n = 2), K (n = 1), N (n = 1), and CF (n = 1) isolates (Table 2).
Amino acid sequence substitutions in C. difficile RpoB are associated with rifamycin resistance.
RpoB of
C. difficile QCD-32g58 (accession no. NZ_AAML04000015)
was identified and aligned with RpoB of
S. aureus (accession
no. CAG39568),
M. tuberculosis (accession no. ABR05024), and
T. aquaticus (accession no. CAB65465) (data not shown). Figure
1 depicts the conserved region of
C. difficile RpoB aligned
with that of
S. aureus, which was the most similar protein of
the three comparison sequences (66% amino acid identity with
C. difficile RpoB). Twenty-five of the 26
S. aureus RpoB single
amino acid substitutions that are known to be associated with
rifamycin resistance occur between residues 137 and 529, which
are equivalent to amino acids 136 to 550 of
C. difficile RpoB
(Fig.
1) (
17). This region was analyzed in all 14 rifamycin-resistant
and 5 nonresistant
C. difficile isolates.
The predicted amino acid sequence of the analyzed region of
RpoB (amino acids 136 to 550) from 19
C. difficile isolates
was conserved and could clearly be divided into two categories
according to phenotype, i.e., rifamycin resistant and nonresistant.
All 14 resistant isolates had sequence differences within this
region compared to the 5 nonresistant isolates; a total of seven
amino acid substitutions were identified at five locations (Table
3; Fig.
1). Four of these amino acids were equivalent to amino
acids of
T. aquaticus RpoB that interact with rifampin (Fig.
1) (
2). The locations of all of the amino acid substitutions
corresponded to locations where substitutions were associated
with rifamycin resistance in
S. aureus RpoB (Fig.
1) (
17). All
of the resistant
C. difficile isolates were obtained from separate
patients and originated from at least 10 different hospitals
in Canada (Quebec and Nova Scotia), the United States (Illinois,
Delaware, California, Vermont, and Maryland), and Argentina
(Table
3).
One set of paired patient specimens came from a patient before
and after the completion of two courses of rifaximin, which
was used in an attempt to interrupt multiple recurrences of
C. difficile disease (
11). These two isolates had identical
REA patterns (group CF strains, Fig.
2), but the rifaximin MICs
for the pre- and posttreatment isolates were 0.0039 and >256
µg/ml, respectively. Remarkably, comparison of the entire
rpoB sequences of these two isolates revealed that they differed
by only a single nucleotide, which resulted in an amino acid
substitution within the conserved region of RpoB of the resistant
isolate (H502Y) (Table
3).

DISCUSSION
In this study, 80
C. difficile unique patient isolates were
analyzed for susceptibility to rifaximin and rifampin. Comparison
of the agar dilution rifaximin and rifampin MICs to rifampin
Etest results showed that the rifampin Etest can reliably predict
rifaximin resistance in
C. difficile (Table
2). Rifamycin susceptibility
testing of these isolates yielded a bimodal distribution pattern.
The MICs for the isolates were either very high or very low,
which agrees with previous findings (
7,
15). In addition, rifamycin
resistance was detected among the members of epidemic REA group
BI. These isolates accounted for more than half of the 14 resistant
unique patient isolates included in this study (Table
3). However,
determination of the clinical implications of our findings will
require the correlation of
C. difficile rifaximin resistance
with treatment response in patients infected with resistant
strains. Clinical correlation studies will be particularly important,
considering that patients undergoing rifaximin therapy can have
fecal rifaximin concentrations as high as 8,000 µg/g (
9).
Fourteen of the 80 isolates we analyzed were resistant to rifaximin and rifampin (MICs, >32 µg/ml). Compared to nonresistant isolates, sequence differences in the rpoB gene of the resistant isolates resulted in amino acid substitutions that most likely explain this phenotype. No other rifamycin resistance mechanisms have been characterized in C. difficile. RpoB amino acid substitutions associated with rifamycin resistance were not clonal and were most likely selected for due to exposure to these antimicrobials (Table 3). Analysis of the REA grouping of the rifaximin-resistant isolates showed that the same sequence substitutions (H502N and R505K) could be detected in more than one REA group (Table 3). This result is not unexpected, since the equivalent amino acids of the T. aquaticus RpoB ortholog directly interact with rifampin (Fig. 1) (2). In addition, previous studies with S. aureus and M. tuberculosis have shown that independently derived mutations in these residues are frequently detected (17, 19, 22).
In our study, the nine rifamycin-resistant isolates within the BI epidemic group had four RpoB sequence differences compared to nonresistant isolates. The R505K amino acid substitution was found in all of the resistant BI group isolates, either as the only substitution or in addition to S488T, H502N, or I548M (Table 3). Each of these isolates was sampled from a separate patient and originated from four different states within the United States and two Canadian provinces (Table 2). These data suggest that the BI isolates were unlikely to have resulted from the clonal dissemination of a single resistant strain. This information further demonstrates that rifamycin therapy could be responsible for the selection of these resistant isolates in individual patients. This conclusion is also supported by the results from the paired patient isolates, which were sampled before rifaximin therapy and after treatment failure (Fig. 2) (11). The RpoB sequence of the rifaximin-resistant posttreatment isolate differed by only one amino acid from that of the nonresistant pretreatment strain (H502Y) (Table 3 and Fig. 1).
We have shown that the rifampin Etest is a suitable surrogate for rifaximin susceptibility testing by agar dilution. Rifaximin-resistant C. difficile isolates all carried sequence substitutions within a conserved RpoB region compared to nonresistant isolates. Molecular typing and analysis of geographic origins determined that these isolates were likely to be independently derived and that rifamycin therapy may have selected for them. We have shown that rifamycin resistance in clinical isolates of C. difficile may be more common than initially suspected, particularly among epidemic BI isolates (7). Further studies are warranted to address the clinical implications of these findings.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Kristin Nagaro, Adam Cheknis, and Walter Zukowski are thanked
for conducting REA typing. James Osmolski is thanked for assistance
with MIC experiments.
This study was supported by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Research Service (D.N.G., S.J., and D.W.H.), NIH grant AI 050122 (D.W.H.), and Genzyme Corporation (D.N.G., S.J., and D.W.H.). The rifaximin compound used was graciously supplied by Salix Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Research (151), Hines VA Hospital, 5000 South 5th Ave., Hines, IL 60141-3030. Phone: (708) 216-3232. Fax: (708) 216-8198. E-mail:
sjohnson{at}lumc.edu 
Published ahead of print on 16 June 2008. 
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://aac.asm.org/. 
Present address: Saint Mary's Health Care and McAuley Health Center, Grand Rapids, MI. 

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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, August 2008, p. 2813-2817, Vol. 52, No. 8
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.00342-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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