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Journal ArticleDOI

Detection of the Smqnr quinolone protection gene and its prevalence in clinical isolates of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in China.

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TLDR
Both the known and the novel Smqnr genes were discovered in both quinolone non-sensitive and sensitive isolates with similar frequency, suggesting that the SmqNR gene makes little contribution to quinOLone resistance in this organism.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to detect novel variants of the Stenotrophomonas maltophilia Smqnr gene family and analyse the prevalence of Smqnr genes in clinical isolates of S. maltophilia in China. In total, 442 clinical isolates of S. maltophilia were collected from nine hospitals in four provinces in China. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing against six commonly used antibiotics was performed on these isolates. The sequences of the Smqnr genes amplified by PCR were aligned with those of known Smqnr genes in GenBank and an Smqnr database. The resistance rate against co-trimoxazole was highest at 48.6 %, followed by resistance rates against ceftazidime, chloramphenicol, ticarcillin/clavulanate and tigecycline at 28.7, 21.3, 19.0 and 16.1 %, respectively. The highest susceptibility was shown to levofloxacin, with a resistance rate of just 6.1 %. Smqnr genes were detected in 114 isolates, and comprised 11 previously identified genes and 20 new variants, bringing the total number of known Smqnr genes to 47. The 20 novel Smqnr genes were designated Smqnr28–47 and the encoded proteins showed only 1–12 amino acid differences among each other. The most common Smqnr genes in China were Smqnr8 and its variant Smqnr35 with prevalences of 17.5 % (20/114) and 13.2 % (15/114), respectively. Both the known and the novel Smqnr genes were discovered in both quinolone non-sensitive and sensitive isolates with similar frequency, suggesting that the Smqnr gene makes little contribution to quinolone resistance in this organism.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of drug resistance: quinolone resistance.

TL;DR: The bacterial quinolone resistance armamentarium is large due to plasmid‐encoded resistance, one mutant aminoglycoside‐modifying enzyme that also modifies certain qu inolones, and mobile efflux pumps, and plasmids with these mechanisms often encode additional antimicrobial resistances and can transfer multidrug resistance that includes quinlones.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plasmid-Mediated Quinolone Resistance

TL;DR: Three mechanisms for plasmid-mediated quinolone resistance (PMQR), found in clinical and environmental isolates around the world, facilitate selection of higher-level resistance and makes infection by pathogens containing PMQR harder to treat.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stenotrophomonas maltophilia as an emerging ubiquitous pathogen: Looking beyond contemporary antibiotic therapy

TL;DR: Clinical reports on S. maltophilia highlight clinical reports on the fluoroquinolone, some tetracycline derivatives and trimethoprim-sulphamethaxole (TMP-SMX) were reported as effective antibiotics with good therapeutic outcome, however, TMP- SMX resistance and allergies to sulfa together with high toxicity of fluoroquolone are notable setbacks.
Journal ArticleDOI

The emergence of clinical resistance to tigecycline

TL;DR: Tigecycline should be cautiously used in the clinic, and efflux-mediated resistance should be closely monitored in order to prolong the lifespan of this useful antibiotic.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Quinolone resistance from a transferable plasmid

TL;DR: Although resistance was low in wild-type strains, higher levels of quinolone resistance arose readily by mutation, suggesting that a multiresistance plasmid can speed the development and spread of resistance to these valuable antimicrobial agents.
Journal ArticleDOI

qnrD, a Novel Gene Conferring Transferable Quinolone Resistance in Salmonella enterica Serovar Kentucky and Bovismorbificans Strains of Human Origin

TL;DR: A phylogenetic analysis of all known qnr sequences was performed and showed that qnrD was more closely related to the qnrB variants but formed an independent cluster, and the first description of thisqnrD gene is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stenotrophomonas maltophilia: an emerging opportunist human pathogen.

TL;DR: Stenotrophomonas maltophilia has emerged as an important opportunistic pathogen in the debilitated host and its ability to colonise respiratory-tract epithelial cells and surfaces of medical devices makes it a ready coloniser of hospitalised patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of plasmid-mediated quinolone resistance determinants over a 9-year period.

TL;DR: The increasing frequency of ciprofloxacin resistance in Enterobacteriaceae was associated with an increasing prevalence of PMQR genes and also an increase in the prevalence of the mutations in gyrA, parC, or both inPMQR-positive strains but not PMQr-negative strains.
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