Involvement of the MexXY-OprM efflux system in emergence of cefepime resistance in clinical strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

Category Primary study
JournalAntimicrobial agents and chemotherapy
Year 2006
Cefepime (FEP) and ceftazidime (CAZ) are potent beta-lactam antibiotics with similar MICs (1 to 2 mug/ml) for wild-type strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. However, recent epidemiological studies have highlighted the occurrence of isolates more resistant to FEP than to CAZ (FEPr/CAZs profile). We thus investigated the mechanisms conferring such a phenotype in 38 clonally unrelated strains collected in two French teaching hospitals. Most of the bacteria (n=32; 84%) appeared to stably overexpress the mexY gene, which codes for the RND transporter of the multidrug efflux system MexXY-OprM. MexXY up-regulation was the sole FEP resistance mechanism identified (n=12) or was associated with increased levels of pump MexAB-OprM (n=5) or MexJK (n=2), synthesis of secondary beta-lactamase PSE-1 (n=10), derepression of cephalosporinase AmpC (n=1), coexpression of both OXA-35 and MexJK (n=1), or production of both PSE-1 and MexAB-OprM (n=1). Down-regulation of the mexXY operon in seven selected strains by the plasmid-borne repressor gene mexZ decreased FEP resistance from two- to eightfold, thereby demonstrating the significant contribution of MexXY-OprM to the FEPr/CAZs phenotype. The six isolates of this series that exhibited wild-type levels of the mexY gene were found to produce beta-lactamase PSE-1 (n=1), OXA-35 (n=4), or both PSE-1 and OXA-35 (n=1). Altogether, these data provide evidence that MexXY-OprM plays a major role in the development of FEP resistance among clinical strains of P. aeruginosa.
Epistemonikos ID: aaf14bf1b2c165805cd6041de896d10926f2f3bd
First added on: Nov 24, 2021