Jpn. J. Infect. Dis., 59 (3), 153-159, 2006

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Original Article

Nosocomial Outbreak of Ceftazidime-Resistant Serratia marcescens Strains That Produce a Chromosomal AmpC Variant with N235K Substitution

Jun Yatsuyanagi1*, Shioko Saito1, Takayuki Konno1, Seizaburo Harata1, Noriyuki Suzuki1, Jun Kato2 and Ken-ichi Amano1,3

1Akita Prefectural Institute of Public Health, Akita 010-0874; 2Yuri Kumiai General Hospital, Akita 015-8511; and 3Bioscience Research Education Center, Akita University, Akita 010-8543, Japan

(Received December 2, 2005. Accepted March 27, 2006)


*Corresponding author: Mailing address: Akita Prefectural Institute of Public Health, 6-6 Sensyu kubota-machi, Akita 010-0874, Japan. Tel: +81-18-832-5005C Fax: +81-18-832-5938, E-mail: jyatsu@spica.freemail.ne.jp


SUMMARY: Serratia marcescens is a Gram-negative bacterium that is often associated with nosocomial infections.@Here we analyzed the resistance mechanism of the ceftazidime-resistant S. marcescens nosocomial strains. The five S. marcescens urinary tract infection-associated isolates were positive for chromosomal ampC and blaTEM-1. Four of the five strains, ES11, ES31, ES42, and ES46, were single clone and ceftazidime resistant. The fifth strain, ES71, was susceptible to ceftazidime. Analysis of the deduced amino acid sequence revealed a Glu-235-Lys substitution in the third amino acid of the third motif of AmpC from both ES46 and ES71, and a site-directed mutagenesis experiment confirmed that this substitution is involved in the ceftazidime resistance phenotype. However, the resistance phenotypes of strains ES46 and ES71 to ceftazidime were quite different from one another, indicating that another mechanism, in addition to the AmpC mutation, is also involved in the determination of the resistance phenotype of these strains. Basal AmpC activity was more than two times higher in strain ES46 than in ES71, which could result in the differing resistance phenotypes of these two strains. The clinical significance and prevalence of extended-spectrum cephalosporin-resistant S. marcescens strains harboring the mutated chromosomal ampC gene are unclear in Japan and remain to be elucidated.


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