SRA STUDY
SRA Study Id ERP125672  (Link to NCBI )
Study Title Evolution of VIM-1 producing Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates from a hospital outbreak revealed the genetic bases of the frequent loss of the urease-positive identification character.
SRA Experiments
SRA Experiment Id ERX4795628  (Link to NCBI )
Experiment Title Sequel sequencing
Exp Library Strategy WGS
Library Source GENOMIC
Library Selection unspecified
Library Name unspecified
Library Layout SINGLE
Library Instrument SEQUEL
Study Abstract Outbreaks of carbapenemase-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae (CPKp) represent a major threat for hospitals. We molecularly characterized the first out- break of VIM-1-producing K. pneumoniae in Spain, which raised fears about the spread of this strain or of the plasmid carrying blaVIM-1. Through in-depth genomic analysis of 18 isolates recovered between October 2005 and September 2007, we show that 17 ST39 isolates were clonal, whereas the last isolate had acquired the VIM-1 plasmid from the epidemic clone. The index isolate carried 31 antibiotic resist- ance genes (ARGs) and was resistant to almost all antibiotics tested. Later isolates further gained mutations in efflux pump regulators ramR and opxR, deletion of mgrB (colistin resistance), and frameshift mutations in ompK36 (b-lactam resistance) likely selected by antibiotic usage. Comparison with publicly available genome sequences and literature review revealed no sign of dissemination of this CPKp strain. However, the VIM-1 plasmid was found in diverse Enterobacterales species, although restricted to Spain. One isolate became urease negative following IS5075 transposition into ureC. Analysis of 9,755 K. pneumoniae genomes showed the same ureC::IS5075 inser- tion in 14.1% of the isolates and explained why urease activity is a variable identifi- cation trait for K. pneumoniae. Transposition into ureC results from the similarity of its 39 end and the terminal inverted repeats of Tn21-like transposons, the targets of IS5075 and related insertion sequences (ISs). As these transposons frequently carry ARGs, this might explain the frequent chromosomal invasion by these ISs and ureC inactivation in multidrug-resistant isolates.
Alias ena-STUDY-IP-10-12-2020-10:44:22:064-95
External Id PRJEB41835