Data from: Novel conserved genotypes correspond to antibiotic resistance phenotypes of E. coli clinical isolates
Current efforts to understand antibiotic resistance on the whole genome scale tend to focus on known genes even as high throughput sequencing strategies uncover novel mechanisms. To identify genomic variations associated with antibiotic resistance, we employed a modified genome-wide association stud...
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Zusammenfassung: | Current efforts to understand antibiotic resistance on the whole genome
scale tend to focus on known genes even as high throughput sequencing
strategies uncover novel mechanisms. To identify genomic variations
associated with antibiotic resistance, we employed a modified genome-wide
association study; we sequenced genomic DNA from pools of E. coli clinical
isolates with similar antibiotic resistance phenotypes using SOLiD
technology to uncover SNPs unanimously conserved in each pool. The
multidrug-resistant pools were genotypically similar to SMS-3-5, a
previously sequenced multidrug-resistant isolate from a polluted
environment. The similarity was evenly spread across the entire genome and
not limited to plasmid or pathogenicity island loci. Among the pools of
clinical isolates, genomic variation was concentrated adjacent to
previously reported inversion and duplication differences between the
SMS-3-5 isolate and the drug-susceptible laboratory strain, DH10B. Single
nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that result in non-synonymous changes in
gyrA (encoding the well-known S83L allele associated with fluoroquinolone
resistance), mutM, ligB, and recG were unanimously conserved in every
fluoroquinolone-resistant pool. Alleles of the latter three genes are
tightly linked among most sequenced E. coli genomes, and had not been
implicated in antibiotic resistance previously. The changes in these genes
map to amino acid positions in alpha helices that are involved in DNA
binding. Plasmid- encoded complementation of null strains with either
allelic variant of mutM or ligB resulted in variable responses to
ultraviolet light or hydrogen peroxide treatment as markers of induced DNA
damage, indicating their importance in DNA metabolism and revealing a
potential mechanism for fluoroquinolone resistance. Our approach uncovered
evidence that additional DNA binding enzymes may contribute to
fluoroquinolone resistance and further implicate environmental bacteria as
a reservoir for antibiotic resistance. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.r8q71 |