Journal article

Escherichia coil Sequence Type 410 Is Causing New International High-Risk Clones


Authors listRoer, Louise; Overballe-Petersen, Soren; Hansen, Frank; Schonning, Kristian; Wang, Mikala; Roder, Bent L.; Hansen, Dennis S.; Justesen, Ulrik S.; Andersen, Leif P.; Fulgsang-Damgaard, David; Hopkins, Katie L.; Woodford, Neil; Falgenhauer, Linda; Chakraborty, Trinad; Samuelsen, Orjan; Sjostrom, Karin; Johannesen, Thor B.; Ng, Kim; Nielsen, Jens; Ethelberg, Steen; Stegger, Marc; Hammerum, Anette M.; Hasman, Henrik

Publication year2018

JournalmSphere

Volume number3

Issue number4

eISSN2379-5042

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00337-18

PublisherAmerican Society for Microbiology


Abstract

Escherichia coil sequence type 410 (ST410) has been reported worldwide as an extraintestinal pathogen associated with resistance to fluoroquinolones, third-generation cephalosporins, and carbapenems. In the present study, we investigated national epidemiology of ST410 E. coil isolates from Danish patients. Furthermore, E. coil ST410 was investigated in a global context to provide further insight into the acquisition of the carbapenemase genes bla(OXA-181) and bla(NMD-5) of this successful lineage. From 127 whole-genome-sequenced isolates, we reconstructed an evolutionary framework of E. coil 5T410 which portrays the antimicrobial-resistant clades B2/H24R, B3/H24Rx, and B4/H24RxC. The 62/H24R and B3/H24Rx clades emerged around 1987, concurrently with the C1/H30R and C2/H30Rx clades in E. coil ST131. B3/H24Rx appears to have evolved by the acquisition of the extendedspectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)-encoding gene bla(CTX-M-15) and an IncFII plasmid, encoding IncFIA and incF1B. Around 2003, the carbapenem-resistant Glade B4/H24RxC emerged when 5T410 acquired an IncX3 plasmid carrying a bla(OXA-181) carbapenemase gene. Around 2014, the Glade B4/H24RxC acquired a second carbapenemase gene, bla(NMD-5), on a conserved IncFII plasmid. From an epidemiological investigation of 49 E. coil ST410 isolates from Danish patients, we identified five possible regional outbreaks, of which one outbreak involved nine patients with bla(OXA-181)- and bla(NMD-5) -carrying B4/H24RxC isolates. The accumulated multidrug resistance in E. coil ST410 over the past two decades, together with its proven potential of transmission between patients, poses a high risk in clinical settings, and thus, E. coil ST410 should be considered a lineage with emerging "high-risk" clones, which should be monitored closely in the future.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleRoer, L., Overballe-Petersen, S., Hansen, F., Schonning, K., Wang, M., Roder, B., et al. (2018) Escherichia coil Sequence Type 410 Is Causing New International High-Risk Clones, mSphere, 3(4), Article e00337-18. https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00337-18

APA Citation styleRoer, L., Overballe-Petersen, S., Hansen, F., Schonning, K., Wang, M., Roder, B., Hansen, D., Justesen, U., Andersen, L., Fulgsang-Damgaard, D., Hopkins, K., Woodford, N., Falgenhauer, L., Chakraborty, T., Samuelsen, O., Sjostrom, K., Johannesen, T., Ng, K., Nielsen, J., ...Hasman, H. (2018). Escherichia coil Sequence Type 410 Is Causing New International High-Risk Clones. mSphere. 3(4), Article e00337-18. https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00337-18


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 10:54