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Multidrug-resistant conjugative plasmid carrying mphA confers increased antimicrobial resistance in Shigella

Asaduzzaman Asad, Israt Jahan, Moriam Akter Munni, R Begum, Morium Akter Mukta, Kazi Saif, Shah Nayeem Faruque, Shoma Hayat, Zhahirul Islam

2024Scientific Reports22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Shigellosis remains a common gastrointestinal disease mostly in children < 5 years of age in developing countries. Azithromycin (AZM), a macrolide, is currently the first-line treatment for shigellosis in Bangladesh; ciprofloxacin (CIP) and ceftriaxone (CRO) are also used frequently. We aimed to evaluate the current epidemiology of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and mechanism(s) of increasing macrolide resistance in Shigella in Bangladesh. A total of 2407 clinical isolates of Shigella from 2009 to 2016 were studied. Over the study period, Shigella sonnei was gradually increasing and become predominant (55%) over Shigella flexneri (36%) by 2016. We used CLSI-guided epidemiological cut-off value (ECV) for AZM in Shigella to set resistance breakpoints (zone-diameter ≤ 15 mm for S. flexneri and ≤ 11 mm for S. sonnei). Between 2009 and 2016, AZM resistance increased from 22% to approximately 60%, CIP resistance increased by 40%, and CRO resistance increased from zero to 15%. The mphA gene was the key macrolide resistance factor in Shigella; a 63MDa conjugative middle-range plasmid was harboring AZM and CRO resistance factors. Our findings show that, especially after 2014, there has been a rapid increase in resistance to the three most effective antibiotics. The rapid spread of macrolide (AZM) resistance genes among Shigella are driven by horizontal gene transfer rather than direct lineage.

Topics & Concepts

ShigellosisShigellaShigella flexneriMicrobiologyShigella boydiiShigella sonneiAntibiotic resistanceAzithromycinBiologyMultiple drug resistanceCiprofloxacinCefotaximeAntibioticsVirologyMedicineBacteriaGeneticsSalmonellaGeneEscherichia coliEscherichia coli research studiesAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology
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