RESUMO
OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to delineate the ability of a plasmid, pS130-4, which harboured both hypervirulence and multidrug resistance genes, to disseminate within Klebsiella pneumoniae, as well as its potential formation mechanism. METHODS: We employed whole-genome sequencing to decipher the genetic architecture of pS130-4. Its capability to conjugate and transfer was assessed through a series of experiments, including plasmid stability, competitive growth, and growth curve analysis. Its expression stability was further evaluated using drug sensitivity, larval survival, and biofilm formation tests. RESULTS: pS130-4 contained four intact modules typical of self-transmissible plasmids. BLAST analysis revealed a sequence identity exceeding 90% with other plasmids from a variety of hosts, suggesting its broad prevalence. Our findings indicated the plasmid's formation resulted from IS26-mediated recombination, leading us to propose a model detailing the creation of this conjugative fusion plasmid housing both blaKPC-2 and hypervirulence genes. Our conjugation experiments established that pS130-4, when present in the clinical strain S130, was self-transmissible with an estimated efficiency between 10-5 and 10-4. Remarkably, pS130-4 showcased a 90% retention rate and did not impede the growth of host bacteria. Galleria mellonella larval infection assay demonstrated that S130 had pronounced toxicity when juxtaposed with high-virulence control strain NTUH-K2044 and low-toxicity control strain ATCC700603. Furthermore, pS130-4's virulence remained intact postconjugation. CONCLUSION: A fusion plasmid, encompassing both hypervirulence and multidrug resistance genes, was viable within K. pneumoniae ST11-KL64 and incurred minimal fitness costs. These insights underscored the criticality of rigorous monitoring to pre-empt the escalation and distribution of this formidable super-plasmid.
Assuntos
Genes MDR , Klebsiella pneumoniae , Animais , Klebsiella pneumoniae/genética , Larva , Plasmídeos/genéticaRESUMO
This study aimed to explore the epidemic, clinical characteristics, and molecular and virulence attributes of Klebsiella pneumoniae serotype K54 (K54-Kp). A retrospective study was conducted on 328 strains of Klebsiella pneumoniae screened in a Chinese hospital from January 2016 to December 2019. The virulence genes and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) were detected by PCR, and a drug sensitivity test was adopted to detect drug resistance. Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and PFGE were performed to determine the clonal correlation between isolates. Biofilm formation assay, serum complement-mediated killing, and Galleria mellonella infection were used to characterize the virulence potential. Our results showed that thirty strains of K54-Kp were screened from 328 strains of bacteria, with an annual detection rate of 2.29%. K54-Kp had a high resistance rate to antibiotics commonly used in the clinic, and patients with hepatobiliary diseases were prone to K54-Kp infection. MLST typing showed 10 sequence typing, mainly ST29 (11/30), which concentrated in the B2 cluster. K54-Kp primarily carried virulence genes of aerobactin, silS, allS, wcaG, wabG, and mrkD, among which the terW gene was closely related to ST29 (p<0.05). The strains infected by the bloodstream had strong biofilm formation ability (p<0.05). Most strains were sensitive to serum. Still, the virulence of pLVPK-like virulence plasmid in ST29-K54 Klebsiella pneumoniae was lower than that of ST11 type and NTUH-K2044 in the Galleria mellonella model. Therefore, these findings supply a foundation to roundly comprehend K54-Kp, and clinicians should strengthen supervision and attention.