Antibiotic Resistance Determinants in a Pseudomonas putida Strain Isolated from a Hospital
0301 basic medicine
Genomic Islands
Antibiotic resistance
Science
Molecular Sequence Data
Microbial Sensitivity Tests
03 medical and health sciences
Bacterial Proteins
Humans
Amino Acid Sequence
Pseudomonas putida
Q
R
Drug Resistance, Microbial
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Chromosomes, Bacterial
Strain isolated
[SDV.MP.BAC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Bacteriology
Hospitals
Anti-Bacterial Agents
3. Good health
Medicine
Genome, Bacterial
Research Article
Plasmids
DOI:
10.1371/journal.pone.0081604
Publication Date:
2014-01-17T21:36:32Z
AUTHORS (12)
ABSTRACT
Environmental microbes harbor an enormous pool of antibiotic and biocide resistance genes that can impact the resistance profiles of animal and human pathogens via horizontal gene transfer. Pseudomonas putida strains are ubiquitous in soil and water but have been seldom isolated from humans. We have established a collection of P. putida strains isolated from in-patients in different hospitals in France. One of the isolated strains (HB3267) kills insects and is resistant to the majority of the antibiotics used in laboratories and hospitals, including aminoglycosides, ß-lactams, cationic peptides, chromoprotein enediyne antibiotics, dihydrofolate reductase inhibitors, fluoroquinolones and quinolones, glycopeptide antibiotics, macrolides, polyketides and sulfonamides. Similar to other P. putida clinical isolates the strain was sensitive to amikacin. To shed light on the broad pattern of antibiotic resistance, which is rarely found in clinical isolates of this species, the genome of this strain was sequenced and analysed. The study revealed that the determinants of multiple resistance are both chromosomally-borne as well as located on the pPC9 plasmid. Further analysis indicated that pPC9 has recruited antibiotic and biocide resistance genes from environmental microorganisms as well as from opportunistic and true human pathogens. The pPC9 plasmid is not self-transmissible, but can be mobilized by other bacterial plasmids making it capable of spreading antibiotic resistant determinants to new hosts.
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