In:
Microbiology Spectrum, American Society for Microbiology, Vol. 9, No. 2 ( 2021-10-31)
Abstract:
Carbapenem-resistant hypervirulent Klebsiella pneumoniae (CR-hvKP) poses a significant public health challenge worldwide, but research on IMP-producing CR-hvKP and its tigecycline resistance is extremely scarce. We report herein the recovery of two IMP-4–producing, capsular serotype K2, sequence type 65 (K2-ST65), hypervirulent K. pneumoniae isolates (C1672 and C2051), which caused severe and fatal infections in ICU patients, after retrospectively screening 3,285 carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae isolates from 26 provinces in China. Notably, C2051 also demonstrated tigecycline nonsusceptibility, mediated by a frameshift mutation in the TetR/AcrR family transcriptional regulator. Both strains harbored bla IMP-4 and critical plasmid-borne virulence genes ( rmpA / rmpA2 , iucA , and iroN ) and demonstrated high virulence in Galleria mellonella , indicating CR-hvKP. The bla IMP-4 gene was located on the IncU- and IncN-type plasmids, which showed high stability in C1672 and C2051 after serial passage for 5 days, with retention rates of 87% and 93.7%, respectively. No significant differences in growth rates were observed among the parental strains and the corresponding resistance plasmid-cured mutants ( P = 0.5273), suggesting that strains carrying the bla IMP and virulence plasmids have the potential to exist for a long time without compromising fitness. The genetic environments of the bla IMP-4 gene in both strains were similar, and it has been inferred that the genetic regions of bla IMP-4 were inserted into different backbones. Several conjugal transfer genes, such as traO , traE , traN , and traBCD , were identified in the bla IMP-4 -bearing plasmid of C2051, suggesting a higher ability for plasmid transmission. The convergence of IMP carbapenemase and tigecycline nonsusceptibility in a classic hypervirulent K. pneumoniae lineage highlights the need to enhance clinical awareness and epidemiologic surveillance. IMPORTANCE To date, research on IMP-producing CR-hvKP is extremely scarce. Only one case of urinary tract infection caused by an IMP-6–producing K1-ST23 hypervirulent K. pneumoniae isolate in Japan was recorded, with a limited description of clinical information and genomic features. None of the published studies examined the virulence of the reported strains or the stability and fitness of resistance plasmids or presented a phylogenetic analysis. This dearth of data is notable because CR-hvKP infections are increasingly identified, but critical characteristics of the emerging resistance mediated by IMP carbapenemases in CR-hvKP remain unknown. Here, we report the emergence of two IMP-4 carbapenemase-producing K2-ST65 hypervirulent K. pneumoniae isolates that caused severe and fatal infections in clinical settings in China. Notably, one of them also demonstrated tigecycline nonsusceptibility. These strains carrying bla IMP and virulence plasmids had the potential to exist for a long time without compromising their fitness, highlighting the urgent need to enhance clinical awareness and epidemiologic surveillance to prevent their dissemination.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
2165-0497
DOI:
10.1128/Spectrum.01305-21
Language:
English
Publisher:
American Society for Microbiology
Publication Date:
2021
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2807133-5