AI Article Synopsis

  • Carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CR) poses a serious public health risk, especially in hospital settings, with limited research on its molecular epidemiology in South American strains.
  • A study analyzed genomic data from 34 CR isolates collected in Santiago, Chile, revealing diverse sequence types and unique lineage formations specific to the region, with no detection of the most common strain type, ST2.
  • The research highlights the complex mechanisms behind antibiotic resistance, including varied genomic contexts for resistance genes and the role of mobile genetic elements in gene acquisition among the different strains.

Article Abstract

Carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CR) is a public health threat accounting for a significant number of hospital-acquired infections. Despite the importance of this pathogen, there is scarce literature on A. baumannii molecular epidemiology and evolutionary pathways relevant to resistance emergence in South American strains. We analyzed the genomic context of 34 CR isolates recovered from clinical samples between 2010 and 2013 from two hospitals in Santiago, Chile, using whole-genome sequencing. Several Institut Pasteur scheme sequence types (STs) were identified among the 34 genomes studied here, including ST1, ST15, ST79, ST162, and ST109. No ST2 (the most widespread sequence type) strain was detected. Chilean isolates were phylogenetically closely related, forming lineages specific to South America (e.g., ST1, ST79, and ST15). The genomic contexts of the resistance genes were diverse: while genes were present in a plasmid in ST15 strains, all genes were chromosomal in ST79 strains. Different variants of a small Rep_3 plasmid played a central role in the acquisition of the carbapenem and aminoglycoside resistance genes in ST1, ST15, and ST79 strains. The gene along with were found in a novel transposon named Tn here. Variants of Tn were also found to play an important role in the acquisition of the and genes. This work draws a detailed picture of the genetic context of antibiotic resistance genes in a set of carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii strains recovered from two Chilean hospitals and reveals a complex evolutionary picture of antibiotic resistance gene acquisition events via multiple routes involving several mobile genetic elements. Treating infections caused by carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii (CR) has become a global challenge given that CR strains are also often resistant to a wide range of antibiotics. Analysis of whole-genome sequence data is now a standard approach for studying the genomic context of antibiotic resistance genes; however, genome sequence data from South American countries are scarce. Here, phylogenetic and genomic analyses of 34 CR strains recovered from 2010 to 2013 from two Chilean hospitals revealed a complex picture leading to the generation of resistant lineages specific to South America. From these isolates, we characterized several mobile genetic elements, some of which are described for the first time. The genome sequences and analyses presented here further our understanding of the mechanisms leading to multiple-drug resistance, extensive drug resistance, and pandrug resistance phenotypes in South America. Therefore, this is a significant contribution to elucidating the global molecular epidemiology of CR.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9602995PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02463-22DOI Listing

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