AI Article Synopsis

  • Haemophilus influenzae HMC-C, which had developed high-level resistance to macrolides, spontaneously reverted to be more susceptible to these antibiotics following experimental selection.
  • Research aimed to uncover the mechanisms behind macrolide resistance in both hypersusceptible and hyperresistant strains, utilizing techniques like radioactive erythromycin studies and ribosomal sequencing.
  • Findings revealed that while ribosomal mutations were present in resistant strains, macrolide efflux was not a factor in the hypersusceptible strain, suggesting that ribosomal changes alone do not lead to high-level resistance without the presence of efflux mechanisms.

Article Abstract

Background: Haemophilus influenzae HMC-C with high-level macrolide resistance after multi-step selection by clarithromycin reverted spontaneously and became hypersusceptible to macrolides.

Objective: Determination of macrolide resistance mechanism(s) in hypersusceptible and hyperresistant strains.

Methods: The presence of macrolide efflux in the strains was studied by radioactive erythromycin accumulation. Ribosomal mutations were investigated by sequencing. The possible role of acrAB clusters in macrolide resistance was studied by sequencing and expression analysis.

Results: The parent strain had no ribosomal alteration, but both high-level resistant and hypersusceptible strains had R88P mutations in ribosomal protein L22. Radioactive macrolide accumulation studies pointed to the presence of macrolide efflux in the high-level resistant and parent strains, but not in the hypersusceptible derivative. Transformation of hypersusceptible strains using total DNA from the parent strain restored the macrolide efflux system in the hypersusceptible strain, which was confirmed by MIC levels and radioactive erythromycin accumulation similar to that of the mutant resistant strain. Analysis of sequence and transcription of acrAB gene clusters showed no significant differences between resistant and hypersusceptible derivatives.

Conclusion: Mutation in ribosomal protein L22 alone does not confer high-level macrolide resistance unless efflux is present.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jac/dkh364DOI Listing

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