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Antibiotic Resistance in Vibrio cholerae: Mechanistic Insights from IncC Plasmid-Mediated Dissemination of a Novel Family of Genomic Islands Inserted at <i>trmE</i>

Nicolas Rivard, Rita R. Colwell, Vincent Burrus

2020mSphere37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The increasing association of the etiological agent of cholera, Vibrio cholerae serogroup O1 and O139, with multiple antibiotic resistance threatens to deprive health practitioners of this effective tool. Drug resistance in cholera results mainly from acquisition of mobile genetic elements. Genomic islands conferring multidrug resistance and mobilizable by IncC conjugative plasmids were reported to circulate in non-O1/non-O139 V. cholerae clinical strains isolated from the 2010 Haitian cholera outbreak. As these genomic islands can be transmitted to pandemic V. cholerae serogroups, their mechanism of transmission needed to be investigated. Our research revealed plasmid- and genomic island-encoded factors required for the resistance island excision, mobilization, and integration, as well as regulation of these functions. The discovery of related genomic islands carrying diverse phage resistance genes but lacking antibiotic resistance-conferring genes in a wide range of marine dwelling bacteria suggests that these elements are ancient and recently acquired drug resistance genes.

Topics & Concepts

Vibrio choleraePlasmidCholeraBiologyAntibiotic resistanceMobile genetic elementsGenomic islandMultiple drug resistanceMicrobiologyDrug resistanceGeneticsGeneVirologyAntibioticsBacteriaVibrio bacteria research studiesAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaAquaculture disease management and microbiota
Antibiotic Resistance in Vibrio cholerae: Mechanistic Insights from IncC Plasmid-Mediated Dissemination of a Novel Family of Genomic Islands Inserted at <i>trmE</i> | Litcius