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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, December 2008, p. 4258-4267, Vol. 52, No. 12
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/AAC.00596-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Genetic Heterogeneity in pbp Genes among Clinically Isolated Group B Streptococci with Reduced Penicillin Susceptibility{triangledown}

Noriyuki Nagano,1,2 Yukiko Nagano,1 Kouji Kimura,1 Kiyoko Tamai,1,3 Hideji Yanagisawa,3 and Yoshichika Arakawa1*

Department of Bacterial Pathogenesis and Infection Control, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo,1 Medical Microbiology Laboratory, Funabashi Municipal Medical Center, Chiba,2 Miroku Medical Laboratory Co., Ltd., Nagano, Japan3

Received 7 May 2008/ Returned for modification 11 July 2008/ Accepted 12 September 2008

The recent emergence of group B streptococcal isolates exhibiting increased penicillin MICs at the Funabashi Municipal Medical Center and other hospitals in Japan prompted a comparative analysis of the penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) from those strains with the PBPs from penicillin-susceptible strains comprising four neonatal invasive strains isolated from 1976 to 1988 and two recent isolates. The PBP sequences of the penicillin-susceptible strains were highly conserved, irrespective of their isolation date. Of six strains with reduced susceptibility to penicillin (penicillin MICs, 0.25 to 0.5 µg/ml), strains R1, R2, R5, and R6 shared a unique set of five amino acid substitutions, including V405A adjacent to the 402SSN404 motif in PBP 2X and one in PBP 2B. The remaining two strains, R3 and R4, shared several substitutions, including Q557E adjacent to the 552KSG554 motif in PBP 2X, in addition to the substitutions in PBP 2B, which are commonly found among penicillin-insusceptible strains. Strains R7 and R8, which had a penicillin MIC of 1 µg/ml, shared a unique set of eight amino acid substitutions (two in PBP 2X; two in PBP 2B, including G613R adjacent to the 614KTG616 motif; three in PBP 1A; and one in PBP 2A), and the Q557E substitution in PBP 2X was common to R3 and R4. The binding of Bocillin FL was reduced or not detected in some PBPs, including PBP 2X of penicillin-insusceptible strains, but no significant reduction in the level of pbp2x transcription was found in such strains. The results of phylogenetic comparative analyses imply the absence of epidemic penicillin-insusceptible strains, and several genetic lineages of penicillin-insusceptible strains have been independently emerging through the accumulation of mutations in their pbp genes, especially in pbp2x.


* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Bacterial Pathogenesis and Infection Control, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, 4-7-1 Gakuen, Musashi-Murayama, Tokyo 208-0011, Japan. Phone: 81-42-561-0771, ext. 500. Fax: 81-42-561-7173. E-mail: yarakawa{at}nih.go.jp

{triangledown} Published ahead of print on 22 September 2008.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, December 2008, p. 4258-4267, Vol. 52, No. 12
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/AAC.00596-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.







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