Recombinations in staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec elements compromise the molecular detection of methicillin resistance in Staphylococcus aureus

Autor: Arnab Pain, Mridul Nair, Olaf Piepenburg, Moataz Abd El Ghany, Matthew S. Forrest, Lyndsey O. Hudson, Andrew Dodgson, Taane G. Clark, Grant A. Hill-Cawthorne
Rok vydání: 2014
Předmět:
Staphylococcus
Gene Transfer
lcsh:Medicine
Recombinase Polymerase Amplification
medicine.disease_cause
law.invention
law
lcsh:Science
Polymerase chain reaction
Genetics
Recombination
Genetic

Horizontal Gene Transfer
0303 health sciences
Multidisciplinary
Bacterial Genomics
Microbial Mutation
Genomics
Chromosomes
Bacterial

Bacterial Genomes
Medical microbiology
3. Good health
Gene cassette
Molecular Diagnostic Techniques
Chromosomal region
Research Article
Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
Staphylococcus aureus
Evolutionary Processes
Molecular Sequence Data
Microbial Genomics
Biology
Sensitivity and Specificity
Microbiology
Bacterial Genes
03 medical and health sciences
medicine
030304 developmental biology
Whole genome sequencing
Evolutionary Biology
Base Sequence
Biology and life sciences
030306 microbiology
SCCmec
lcsh:R
Bacteriology
biochemical phenomena
metabolism
and nutrition

bacterial infections and mycoses
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
Microbial pathogens
Multilocus sequence typing
lcsh:Q
Methicillin Resistance
Bacterial pathogens
Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction
Zdroj: PLoS ONE
PLoS ONE, Vol 9, Iss 6, p e101419 (2014)
ISSN: 1932-6203
Popis: Clinical laboratories are increasingly using molecular tests for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) screening. However, primers have to be targeted to a variable chromosomal region, the staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (SCCmec). We initially screened 726 MRSA isolates from a single UK hospital trust by recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA), a novel, isothermal alternative to PCR. Undetected isolates were further characterised using multilocus sequence, spa typing and whole genome sequencing. 96% of our tested phenotypically MRSA isolates contained one of the six orfX-SCCmec junctions our RPA test and commercially available molecular tests target. However 30 isolates could not be detected. Sequencing of 24 of these isolates demonstrated recombinations within the SCCmec element with novel insertions that interfered with the RPA, preventing identification as MRSA. This result suggests that clinical laboratories cannot rely solely upon molecular assays to reliably detect all methicillin-resistance. The presence of significant recombinations in the SCCmec element, where the majority of assays target their primers, suggests that there will continue to be isolates that escape identification. We caution that dependence on amplification-based molecular assays will continue to result in failure to diagnose a small proportion (∼4%) of MRSA isolates, unless the true level of SCCmec natural diversity is determined by whole genome sequencing of a large collection of MRSA isolates.
Databáze: OpenAIRE