A mosaic tetracycline resistance gene tet(S/M) detected in an MDR pneumococcal CC230 lineage that underwent capsular switching in South Africa

OBJECTIVES: We reported tet(S/M) in Streptococcus pneumoniae and investigated its temporal spread in relation to nationwide clinical interventions. METHODS: We whole-genome sequenced 12 254 pneumococcal isolates from 29 countries on an Illumina HiSeq sequencer. Serotype, multilocus ST and antibiotic...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy 2020-03, Vol.75 (3), p.512-520
Hauptverfasser: Lo, Stephanie W, Gladstone, Rebecca A, van Tonder, Andries J, Du Plessis, Mignon, Cornick, Jennifer E, Hawkins, Paulina A, Madhi, Shabir A, Nzenze, Susan A, Kandasamy, Rama, Ravikumar, KL, Elmdaghri, Naima, Kwambana-Adams, Brenda, Almeida, Samanta Cristine Grassi, Skoczynska, Anna, Egorova, Ekaterina, Titov, Leonid, Saha, Samir K, Paragi, Metka, Everett, Dean B, Antonio, Martin, Klugman, Keith P, Li, Yuan, Metcalf, Benjamin J, Beall, Bernard, McGee, Lesley, Breiman, Robert F, Bentley, Stephen D, von Gottberg, Anne, Global Pneumococcal Sequencing Consortium
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:OBJECTIVES: We reported tet(S/M) in Streptococcus pneumoniae and investigated its temporal spread in relation to nationwide clinical interventions. METHODS: We whole-genome sequenced 12 254 pneumococcal isolates from 29 countries on an Illumina HiSeq sequencer. Serotype, multilocus ST and antibiotic resistance were inferred from genomes. An SNP tree was built using Gubbins. Temporal spread was reconstructed using a birth-death model. RESULTS: We identified tet(S/M) in 131 pneumococcal isolates and none carried other known tet genes. Tetracycline susceptibility testing results were available for 121 tet(S/M)-positive isolates and all were resistant. A majority (74%) of tet(S/M)-positive isolates were from South Africa and caused invasive diseases among young children (59% HIV positive, where HIV status was available). All but two tet(S/M)-positive isolates belonged to clonal complex (CC) 230. A global phylogeny of CC230 (n=389) revealed that tet(S/M)-positive isolates formed a sublineage predicted to exhibit resistance to penicillin, co-trimoxazole, erythromycin and tetracycline. The birth-death model detected an unrecognized outbreak of this sublineage in South Africa between 2000 and 2004 with expected secondary infections (effective reproductive number, R) of ∼2.5. R declined to ∼1.0 in 2005 and
ISSN:0305-7453
DOI:10.1093/jac/dkz477