Login / Signup

Genetic Characteristics and Microbiological Profile of Hypermucoviscous Multidrug-Resistant Klebsiella variicola Coproducing IMP-4 and NDM-1 Carbapenemases.

Bingjie WangFen PanDingding HanWantong ZhaoYingying ShiYan SunChun WangTiandong ZhangHong Zhang
Published in: Microbiology spectrum (2022)
We report here a hypermucoviscous, New Delhi metallo-β-lactamase 1 (NDM-1) and imipenemase 4 (IMP-4) carbapenemases-coproducing Klebsiella variicola isolate obtained from a pediatric patient. This strain was resistant to carbapenems and most other β-lactams. Although hypermucoviscous, this strain possessed attenuated virulence according to serum killing assay and Galleria mellonella infection model. Notably, two copies of bla NDM-1 were contained on two tandem IS CR1 elements and coexisted with bla IMP-4 in a novel hybrid multidrug resistance plasmid. This is the first description of the coexistence of bla NDM-1 and bla IMP-4 in a single plasmid of hypermucoviscous K. variicola. IMPORTANCE As an important member of the Klebsiella pneumoniae complex, Klebsiella variicola is poorly studied as an emerging human pathogen. We, for the first time, report a unique K. variicola isolated from a pediatric patient in China. This isolate exhibited hypermucoviscosity, a classic hypervirulence characteristic of K. pneumoniae, and contained multiple carbapenem-resistant genes, including bla IMP-1 and bla NDM-1 . Interestingly, these antimicrobial resistance genes were located on a novel hybrid plasmid, and our results suggested that this plasmid might have been introduced from K. pneumoniae and undergone a series of integration and recombination evolutionary events. Overall, our study provides more insight into K . variicola and highlights its superior capability to acquire and maintain foreign resistance genes.
Keyphrases