A mechanism of carbapenem resistance due to a new insertion element (ISPa133) in Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Publication date

2014-06-25T09:55:26Z

2014-06-25T09:55:26Z

2011-03

2014-06-25T09:55:26Z

Abstract

This study explored the evolutionary mechanism by which the clinical isolate PA110514 yields the imipenemresistant derivative PA116136. Both isolates were examined by PFGE and SDS-PAGE, which led to the identification of a new insertion sequence, ISPa133. This element was shown to have distinct chromosomal locations in each of the original isolates that appeared to explain the differences in imipenem susceptibilty. In strain PA110514, ISPa133 is located 56 nucleotides upstream of the translational start codon, which has no effect on expression of the porin OprD. However, in strain PA116136 ISPa133 it is located in front of nucleotide 696 and, by interrupting the coding region, causes a loss of OprD expression, thus conferring imipenem resistance. In vitro experiments mimicking the natural conditions of selective pressure yielded imipenem-resistant strains in which ISPa133 similarly interrupted oprD. A mechanism is proposed whereby ISPa133 acts as a mobile switch, with its position in oprD depending on the degree of selective pressure exerted by imipenem

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Spanish Society for Microbiology (SEM) and Viguera Editores SL

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.2436/20.1501.01.135

International Microbiology, 2011, vol. 14, num. 1, p. 51-58

http://dx.doi.org/10.2436/20.1501.01.135

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Rights

cc-by-nc-sa (c) Spanish Society for Microbiology (SEM) and Viguera Editores SL, 2011

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/es