Identification of mobile colistin resistance genes (mcr-1.1, mcr-5 and mcr-8.1) in Enterobacteriaceae and Alcaligenes faecalis of human and animal origin, Nigeria.

International journal of antimicrobial agents(2020)

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摘要
Colistin is a last-resort drug used to treat infections caused by multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria that have developed carbapenem resistance. Emergence and rapid dissemination of the nine plasmid-mediated mobile colistin resistance genes (mcr-1 to mcr-9) has led to fear of pandrug-resistant infections worldwide. To date, there is only limited information on colistin resistance in African countries where the drug is widely used in agriculture. In this Nigerian study, 583 non-duplicate bacterial strains were isolated from 1119 samples from humans, camels, cattle, dogs, pigs and poultry using colistin-supplemented MacConkey agar, among which 17.0% (99/583) were colistin-resistant. PCR (mcr-1 to mcr-9) and whole-genome sequencing (WGS) identified mcr in 21.2% (21/99) of colistin-resistant isolates: mcr-1.1 (n = 13), mcr-8.1 (n = 5), mcr-1.1 and mcr-8.1 (n = 2), and mcr-1.1 and mcr-5 (n = 1). Of the 21 mcr-positive strains, 9 were isolated from human samples, with 8 being Klebsiella pneumoniae, and 6 of these human K. pneumoniae had a high colistin MIC (>64 μg/mL). In contrast, 9 of the 12 mcr-positive animal isolates were Escherichia coli, of which only 2 had a colistin MIC of >64 μg/mL. This study is the first to report mcr-1 in Alcaligenes faecalis and the emergence of mcr-5 and mcr-8 in Nigeria. WGS determined that mcr-1 was localised on an IncX4 plasmid and that 95.2% of mcr-1 harbouring isolates (20/21) transferred colistin resistance successfully by conjugation. These findings highlight the global spread of colistin resistance and emphasise the urgent need for co-ordinated global action to combat resistant bacteria.
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