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Variable recombination dynamics during the emergence, transmission and 'disarming' of a multidrug-resistant pneumococcal cloneopen access

Authors
Croucher, NJ[Croucher, Nicholas J.]Hanage, WP[Hanage, William P.]Harris, SR[Harris, Simon R.]McGee, L[McGee, Lesley]van der Linden, M[van der Linden, Mark]de Lencastre, H[de Lencastre, Herminia]Sa-Leao, R[Sa-Leao, Raquel]Song, JH[Song, Jae-Hoon]Ko, KS[Ko, Kwan Soo]Beall, B[Beall, Bernard]Klugman, KP[Klugman, Keith P.]Parkhill, J[Parkhill, Julian]Tomasz, A[Tomasz, Alexander]Kristinsson, KG[Kristinsson, Karl G.]Bentley, SD[Bentley, Stephen D.]
Issue Date
23-Jun-2014
Publisher
BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
Keywords
Bacterial evolution; Antibiotic resistance; Recombination; Mobile genetic elements; Coalescent analysis; Phylogeography
Citation
BMC BIOLOGY, v.12
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
BMC BIOLOGY
Volume
12
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/skku/handle/2021.sw.skku/52606
DOI
10.1186/1741-7007-12-49
ISSN
1741-7007
Abstract
Background: Pneumococcal beta-lactam resistance was first detected in Iceland in the late 1980s, and subsequently peaked at almost 25% of clinical isolates in the mid-1990s largely due to the spread of the internationally-disseminated multidrug-resistant PMEN2 (or Spain(6B)-2) clone of Streptococcus pneumoniae. Results: Whole genome sequencing of an international collection of 189 isolates estimated that PMEN2 emerged around the late 1960s, developing resistance through multiple homologous recombinations and the acquisition of a Tn5253-type integrative and conjugative element (ICE). Two distinct clades entered Iceland in the 1980s, one of which had acquired a macrolide resistance cassette and was estimated to have risen sharply in its prevalence by coalescent analysis. Transmission within the island appeared to mainly emanate from Reykjavik and the Southern Peninsular, with evolution of the bacteria effectively clonal, mainly due to a prophage disrupting a gene necessary for genetic transformation in many isolates. A subsequent decline in PMEN2's prevalence in Iceland coincided with a nationwide campaign that reduced dispensing of antibiotics to children in an attempt to limit its spread. Specific mutations causing inactivation or loss of ICE-borne resistance genes were identified from the genome sequences of isolates that reverted to drug susceptible phenotypes around this time. Phylogenetic analysis revealed some of these occurred on multiple occasions in parallel, suggesting they may have been at least temporarily advantageous. However, alteration of 'core' sequences associated with resistance was precluded by the absence of any substantial homologous recombination events. Conclusions: PMEN2's clonal evolution was successful over the short-term in a limited geographical region, but its inability to alter major antigens or 'core' gene sequences associated with resistance may have prevented persistence over longer timespans.
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