Klebsiella pneumoniae: a progression to multidrug resistance
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Abstract
Klebsiella pneumoniae is a common cause of nosocomial and community-acquired
infections, and the increasing incidence and prevalence of antibiotic resistant strains
is proving to be particularly problematic to clinicians. K. pneumoniae is capable of
employing a multitude of mechanisms by which to confer resistance to most
available antibiotics. The carbapenem antibiotics are usually reserved for the
treatment of complicated or multidrug resistant (MDR) K. pneumoniae infections.
The recent emergence of not only MDR but also pan-drug resistant (PDR) K.
pneumoniae strains has signified that it is now more important than ever to
understand the mechanisms by which these strains confer resistance so that we may
find ways to combat or hinder this progression. This project aimed to investigate the
regulation of the transcriptional activator RamA, its ability to confer a MDR
phenotype, and the mechanisms employed by K. pneumoniae to confer levels of
carbapenem resistance sufficient to result in therapy failure.
The analysis of a panel of K. pneumoniae strains, containing both RamA expressers
and non-expressers, demonstrated that the overexpression of RamA was sufficient to
confer an MDR phenotype. Two compounds, chlorpromazine (CPZ) and tigecycline,
were shown to act as inducers of ramA, romA and acrA transcription. CPZ exhibited
synergy with the antibiotics chloramphenicol, norfloxacin and tetracycline, all of
which are known substrates of the AcrAB efflux pump. The current lack of novel
classes of antimicrobials in development indicate a potential for a compound, such as
CPZ, to be developed and exploited for clinical use. The ability of both CPZ and tigecycline to cause mutations within ramR however, indicate that both compounds
may have the ability to select for efflux mutants as a result of their ability to
upregulate ramA, which in turn causes the upregulation of the AcrAB efflux pump.
The regulation of RamA by the upstream gene ramR, which encodes a TetR family
protein was investigated in K. pneumoniae isolates. Sequencing of the ramR genes
revealed that strains exhibiting an MDR phenotype commonly contained mutations
within their gene sequences. The complementation of a wildtype ramR into a strain
containing a 32 amino acid deletion within its ramR, was shown to increase
susceptibility to various antibiotics of different classes, and additionally
downregulate the expression of ramA, romA and acrA. CPZ, ciprofloxacin and
tigecycline K. pneumoniae mutants were shown to exhibit increased MICs to a broad
spectrum of antibiotics with respect to their parent strains, and possess mutations
within their ramR genes. Complementation of the wildtype ramR resulted in partial
reversion to the parental phenotypes, indicating another mechanism must also be
involved in conferring the MDR phenotypes. These studies indicated that RamR
plays an important role as a negative regulator of RamA, but also that it is not the
sole regulator.
The development of reduced susceptibility to the carbapenems was investigated in
two clinical strains of K. pneumoniae, K1 and K2, isolated from the urine of a single
patient at different stages of antibiotic therapy. The strains were shown to exhibit
similar resistance phenotypes with the exception of their susceptibilities to the
carbapenems. PCR and phenotypic analyses revealed that neither strain contained any carbapenemases or AmpC enzymes, but both contained OXA-1, SHV-1 TEM-1
and CTX-M-15. Analysis of their OMP profiles indicated that both strains lacked
OmpK35, and K2 additionally lacked OmpK36. Mutation studies showed that the
phenotype and OMP profile exhibited by K2 could be achieved in K1 via single step
mutations using ertapenem, imipenem or meropenem. Susceptibility testing of CTXM-
15 clinical strains showed that strains containing CTX-M-15 showed reduced
activity against ertapenem in the presence of clavulanic acid. These studies indicated
a potential role for CTX-M-15 in conferring reduced susceptibility to the
carbapenems when found in conjunction with altered permeability and active efflux.
The mechanisms of antibiotic resistance employed by K. pneumoniae are numerous
and complex. This work highlights several of these mechanisms and, more
importantly, how they can work in synergy with one another to devastating
consequences.
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