Characterization of OXA-25, OXA-26, and OXA-27, Molecular Class D β-Lactamases Associated with Carbapenem Resistance in Clinical Isolates of Acinetobacter baumannii
Open Access
- 1 February 2001
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
- Vol. 45 (2) , 583-588
- https://doi.org/10.1128/aac.45.2.583-588.2001
Abstract
Carbapenem resistance in Acinetobacter spp. is increasingly being associated with OXA-type β-lactamases with weak hydrolytic activity against imipenem and meropenem. Such enzymes were characterized from Acinetobacter isolates collected in Belgium, Kuwait, Singapore, and Spain. The isolates from Spain and Belgium had novel class D β-lactamases that were active against carbapenems. These were designated OXA-25 and OXA-26, respectively, and had >98% amino acid homology with each other and with the OXA-24 enzyme recently described by others from an Acinetobacterisolate collected elsewhere in Spain. The isolate from Singapore had OXA-27 β-lactamase, another novel class D type with only 60% homology to OXA-24, -25, and -26, but with 99% homology to OXA-23 (ARI-1), described previously from an Acinetobacter baumannii isolate collected in Scotland. Sequence data were not obtained for the carbapenem-hydrolyzing OXA enzyme from the isolate from Kuwait; nevertheless, the enzyme was phenotypically similar to OXA-25 and -26. The enzymes OXA-23, -24, -25, -26, and -27 retained the STFK and SXV motifs typical of class D β-lactamases, but the YGN motif was altered to FGN. The KTG motif was retained by OXA-27 and -23 but was replaced by KSG in OXA-24, -25, and -26. OXA-25 and -26 enzymes were strongly active against oxacillin, but unusually for an OXA-type β-lactamase, OXA-27 had apparently weak activity, although measurement was complicated by biphasic kinetics. None of the new enzymes was transmissible to Escherichia coli recipients. Many Acinetobacter isolates are multiresistant to other antibiotics, and the emergence of class D enzymes with carbapenem-hydrolyzing activity is a disturbing development for antimicrobial chemotherapy.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Carbapenemases of Chryseobacterium ( Flavobacterium ) meningosepticum : Distribution of blaB and Characterization of a Novel Metallo-β-Lactamase Gene, blaB3 , in the Type Strain, NCTC 10016Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 2000
- Worldwide emergence of carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter spp.Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, 1998
- Oxacillin-hydrolyzing β-lactamase involved in resistance to imipenem in Acinetobacter baumanniiFEMS Microbiology Letters, 1997
- Oxacillin-hydrolyzing β-lactamase involved in resistance to imipenem in Acinetobacter baumanniiFEMS Microbiology Letters, 1997
- Transferable imipenem-resistance in Acinetobacter species from a clinical sourceJournal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, 1995
- Interaction of sulbactam, clavulanic acid and tazobactam with penicillin-binding proteins of imipenem-resistant and -susceptibleacinetobacter baumanniiFEMS Microbiology Letters, 1995
- CLUSTAL W: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choiceNucleic Acids Research, 1994
- The Role of Tyrosine 150 in Catalysis of .beta.-Lactam Hydrolysis by AmpC .beta.-Lactamase from Escherichia coli Investigated by Site-Directed MutagenesisBiochemistry, 1994
- Phylogeny of LCR‐1 and OXA‐5 with class A and class D β‐lactamasesMolecular Microbiology, 1992
- Rapid extraction of bacterial genomic DNA with guanidium thiocyanateLetters in Applied Microbiology, 1989