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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 09 1996, 1988-1994, Vol 40, No. 9
K Kimura, Y Arakawa, S Ohsuka, H Ito, K Suzuki, H Kurokawa, N Kato and M Ohta
Nine Klebsiella oxytoca strains which demonstrated resistance to the
combination of sulbactam and cefoperazone were isolated from geographically
separate hospitals in Japan in 1995. Among them, K. oxytoca SB23 showed
high-level resistance to sulbactam-cefoperazone (MIC > 128
micrograms/ml) and aztreonam (MIC, 128 micrograms/ml). The
sulbactam-cefoperazone resistance was not transferred from strain SB23 to
Escherichia coli CSH2 by conjugation, beta-Lactamase RbiA, produced by
strain SB23, was purified, and the molecular mass was estimated to be 29
kDa by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Kinetic
parameters for RbiA revealed that cefoperazone and aztreonam were
hydrolyzed efficiently by this enzyme. Moreover, ceftazidime and imipenem
were also hydrolyzed weakly by RbiA, although strain SB23 did not show any
resistance to these agents. Clavulanate, sulbactam, and tazobactam failed
to block the hydrolysis of cefoperazone by RbiA. The structural gene of
RbiA (blaRBI) was cloned and sequenced, and the deduced amino acid sequence
of RbiA demonstrated high-level similarities to those of the
beta-lactamases found in K. oxytoca D488, E23004, and plasmid-mediated
MEN-1, which have been classified into Bush functional group 2be. Although
RbiA demonstrates high-level molecular similarity to the enzymes in group
2be, from an enzymological point of view, this enzyme might be
differentiated from the enzymes in that group. Hybridization analysis
revealed that beta-lactamase genes highly similar to blaRBI were generally
encoded on the chromosome of the sulbactam-cefoperazone-resistant clinical
isolates of K. oxytoca tested in the study, despite their different
derivations. This observation suggests that
sulbactam-cefoperazone-resistant A. oxytoca strains which produce RbiA-type
beta-lactamases have been proliferating in many hospitals in Japan.
Copyright © 1996 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Molecular aspects of high-level resistance to sulbactam-cefoperazone in Klebsiella oxytoca clinical isolates
Department of Bacteriology, Nagoya University School of Medicine, Japan.
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