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Published online ahead of print on 9 April 2009 as doi:10.1099/mic.0.023234-0
Microbiology 2009;155:1656.

Microbiology (2009), DOI 10.1099/mic.0.023234-0
© 2009 Society for General Microbiology

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Microbiology 0 (2009), mic.0.023234; DOI  10.1099/mic.0.023234-0
© 2009 Society for General Microbiology


Multiple acquisitions of CTX-M-plasmids in the rare D2 genotype of Escherichia coli provide evidence for convergent evolution

Catherine Deschamps1, Olivier Clermont2, Marie Claire Hipeaux1, Guillaume Arlet3, Erick Denamur2 and Catherine Branger1,4

1 Hôpital Louis Mourier;
2 INSERM U722;
3 Hôpital Tenon

ABSTRACT

Over the last decade, CTX-M enzymes have become the most prevalent extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs) worldwide, mostly in Escherichia coli, causing a major health problem. An epidemiological relationship has been established between a rare genotype of E. coli, the D2 genotype, and the presence of CTX-M genes. We investigated this striking association, by exploring the genetic backgrounds of 18 D2 genotype CTX-M-producing strains and of the plasmids encoding CTX-M enzymes. The 18 strains had different genetic backgrounds, as assessed by multilocus sequence and O typing, and were associated with various plasmids bearing diverse CTX-M genes. The region encompassing the genetic marker of the D2 genotype (TSPE4.C2) was not correlated with the presence of CTX-M genes. CTX-M-producing D2 strains had far fewer virulence factors than a control group of 8 non-ESBL-producing D2 strains and an inverse relationship was found between the number of coresistances associated with CTX-M gene and the number of virulence factors found in the strain. These findings provide evidence for multiple acquisitions of plasmids carrying CTX-M genes in different D2 genotype strains. They strongly suggest that convergent evolution has occurred and indicate that there has been selection for the association of a specific genetic background of the strain and the CTX-M gene. This fine-tuning of the relationship between D2 genotype and CTX-M genes presumably increases the fitness of the strain, indicating a role for the host cell in the acquisition and dissemination of CTX-M genes.

4 E-mail: catherine.branger{at}lmr.aphp.fr




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[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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