AI Article Synopsis

  • A study identified 124 cases of multidrug-resistant hypervirulent Klebsiella pneumoniae (MDR-hvKP) from clinical isolates, revealing that this strain poses a significant public health threat due to its high virulence and varying levels of antibiotic resistance.* -
  • The hypervirulent strains exhibited distinct characteristics, such as higher frequencies of specific virulence genes and capsular serotype K1 compared to classic Klebsiella, especially in non-MDR and extended-spectrum beta-lactamase producing groups.* -
  • The research demonstrated that lower expression of certain virulence factors in classic Klebsiella linked to decreased hypervirulence, while some hypervirulent strains showed resistance to certain antibiotics like tig

Article Abstract

Multidrug-resistant hypervirulent (MDR-hvKP) has been increasingly reported and is now recognized as a significant threat to public health; however, characterization of MDR-hvKP has not been systematically investigated. In the present study, 124 of 428 (28.92%) clinical isolates collected from January 2010 to December 2016 were identified with aerobactin and defined as hvKP; these included 94 non-MDR-KP, 20 extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing (ESBL-KP), and 10 carbapenem-resistant (CR-KP) isolates. The remaining 304 isolates without presence of virulence factor aerobactin were defined as classic (cKP). The antimicrobial resistance rate of cKP was significantly higher than that of the hvKP isolates in the non-MDR-KP group, but showed no significant differences in the ESBL-KP and CR-KP groups. The detection frequencies of capsular serotype K1 (), hypermucoviscosity, sequence type 23 (ST23), and the virulence gene were significantly higher in the hvKP than cKP isolates in all three groups ( < 0.05). Most of the hypervirulent ESBL-KP and CR-KP isolates were K non-typeable (16/30) and harbored at least one gene for virulence (26/30). The hypervirulent ESBL-KP isolates primarily carried (12/20, 60%) genes, and the hypervirulent CR-KP isolates mainly carried (8/10, 80%) genes. Moreover, three hypervirulent ESBL-KP and two hypervirulent CR-KP isolates showed resistance to tigecycline but were sensitive to colistin. The transcriptional levels of in cKP were much lower than that in hvKP isolates in all three groups. Furthermore, overexpression of in the -low-expression cKP isolates could enhance bacterial virulence in the mouse infection experiment. In conclusion, our data suggest that the capsular serotype K1 (), , hypermucoviscosity, and ST23 were strongly associated with hvKP in non-MDR-KP, ESBL-KP, and CR-KP groups, and low expression levels contributed to the absence of hypervirulent phenotype.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7090111PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.00436DOI Listing

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