Incidence of two virulence factors (aerobactin and mucoid phenotype) among 190 clinical isolates of Klebsiella pneumoniae producing extended-spectrum β-lactamase
Because outbreaks of multiple-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates producing extended-spectrum beta-lactamases were recently observed in French hospitals, the presence of virulence factors was examined for (i) phenotype by bioassay for aerobactin production and by culture for the mucoid phenotype, and (ii) genotype using intragenic probes of respectively 2-kb BglII and 235-bp BamHI-BglII fragments and dot-blotting among 190 unreplicated K. pneumoniae clinical isolates issued from 25 French hospitals and producing different types of extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (TEM-related enzymes: TEM-3, TEM-4, CAZ-1, CAZ-2, TEM-8, or SHV-related enzymes: SHV-2, SHV-3, SHV-4). Only 3.7% and 7% of K. pneumoniae isolates produced aerobactin and mucoid phenotypes respectively, unrelated to type of beta-lactamase. Only 2% had both factors. No discordance was reported according to the detection method tested. The low prevalence of such virulence factors seems to indicate they were not involved in dissemination of nosocomial K. pneumoniae isolates producing an extended-spectrum beta-lactamase.