Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8385602 | International Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2014 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Tetracycline-resistance (TetR) has been postulated as a marker of the livestock-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) lineage CC398. Objectives of the study: to determine the spa-types and assigned MLST clonal complexes (CCs) among all 98 MRSA-TetR strains recovered during 2011-2012 (from different patients) in a Spanish Hospital, analyzing the possible correlation with livestock-contact of the patients. All 98 strains were assigned to 9 CCs: CC398 (60.2%), CC1 (19.4%), CC5 (12.2%), and other CCs (8.2%). The 98 patients were classified into three groups: (A) contact with livestock-animals (n = 25); (B) no-contact with livestock-animals (n = 42); (C) no information about animal contact (n = 31). A significant higher percentage of CC398 strains was obtained in group A (76%) than in group B (50%) (p < 0.05), being the percentage in group C of 61.3%. Most of MRSA-TetR-CC398 strains presented a multi-resistance phenotype, including erythromycin, clindamycin, and ciprofloxacin, and the most prevalent detected genes were tet(M) and erm(C). Three strains presented the phenotype macrolide-susceptibility/lincosamide-resistance and contained the vga(A) gene. MRSA-CC1 strains showed higher percentages of erythromycin/clindamycin resistance (95%/89%) than MRSA-CC398 strains (58%/63%), and this resistance was usually mediated by erm(C) gene. Most of MRSA-CC5 strains showed resistance to ciprofloxacin, tobramycin/kanamycin and erythromycin. None of the strains presented the genes lukF/lukS-PV, tsst-1, eta, etb or etd. All MRSA-CC398 strains lacked the genes of the immune-evasion-cluster, but MRSA-CC1 strains carried these genes (type E). In conclusion, although MRSA CC398 is detected in a significant higher proportion in patients with livestock-contact; its detection in people without this type of contact also indicates its capacity for human-to-human transmission.
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Authors
Daniel Benito, Carmen Lozano, Antonio Rezusta, Isabel Ferrer, Maria Alejandra Vasquez, Sara Ceballos, Myriam Zarazaga, Maria José Revillo, Carmen Torres,