1. Genomics analysis of KPC-2 and NDM-5-producing Enterobacteriaceae in migratory birds from Qinghai Lake, China.
- Author
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Bai, Shuancheng, Fang, Liangxing, Xiao, Hongliang, Zhang, Yin, Guo, Wenying, Zhang, Jixing, Liu, Juan, Zhang, Yan, Wang, Minge, Sun, Ruanyang, Han, Lu, Yu, Yang, Sun, Jian, Liu, Yahong, and Liao, Xiaoping
- Subjects
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MIGRATORY birds , *GENOMICS , *CARBAPENEM-resistant bacteria , *ENTEROBACTERIACEAE , *MULTIDRUG resistance , *PLASMIDS - Abstract
The study examined the epidemiological characteristics of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) isolated from migratory birds and surroundings in Qinghai Lake, China. We identified 69 (15.7%) CRE isolates from a total of 439 samples including 29 (6.6%) blaNDM-5Escherichia coli and 40 (9.1%) blaKPC-2Klebsiella pneumoniae. WGS analysis indicated that ST746, ST48, ST1011, and ST167 were the primary sequence types (ST) for blaNDM-5E. coli, while all blaKPC-2 K. pneumoniae were ST11 and harbored numerous antibiotic resistance gene types including blaCTX-M, qnrS, and rmtB. A phylogenetic tree based on core genomes revealed that blaNDM-5E. coli was highly heterogeneous while the blaKPC-2 K. pneumoniae was highly genetically similar within the group and to human Chinese isolates. IncX3, IncHI2, and IncFIB-HI2 plasmid replicon types were associated with blaNDM-5 spread, while IncFII-R and IncFII plasmids mediated blaKPC-2 spread. We also identified IncFII-R hybrid plasmids most likely formed by IS26-mediated integration of IncFII into IncR plasmid backbones. This also facilitated the persistence of IncFII-R plasmids and antibiotic resistance genes including blaKPC-2. In addition, all of the blaKPC-2 K. pneumoniae isolates harbored a pLVKP-like virulence plasmid carrying a combination of two or more hypervirulence markers that included peg-344, iroB, iucA, rmpA, and rmpA2. This is the first description of ST11 K. pneumoniae that co-carried blaKPC-2- and pLVKP-like virulence plasmids from migratory birds. The blaKPC-2 K. pneumoniae carried by migratory birds displayed high genetic relatedness to human isolates highlighting a high risk of transmission of these K. pneumoniae. Key points: • Multidrug resistance plasmids (blaKPC-2, bla436NDM-5, bla CTX-M, qnrS, and rmtB). • Co-occurrence of plasmid-mediated resistance and virulence genes. • High similarity between migratory bird genomes and humans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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