12 research outputs found
Whole genome sequencing reveals high-resolution epidemiological links between clinical and environmental Klebsiella pneumoniae.
BACKGROUND: Klebsiella pneumoniae is a gram-negative bacterial species capable of occupying a broad range of environmental and clinical habitats. Known as an opportunistic pathogen, it has recently become a major causative agent of clinical infections worldwide. Despite growing knowledge about the highly diverse population of K. pneumoniae, the evolution and clinical significance of environmental K. pneumoniae, as well as the relationship between clinical and environmental K. pneumoniae, are poorly defined. METHODS: We isolated and sequenced K. pneumoniae from in-patients in a single hospital in Thailand, as well as hospital sewage, and surrounding canals and farms within a 20-km radius. RESULTS: Phylogenetic analysis of 77 K. pneumoniae (48 clinical and 29 non-clinical isolates) demonstrated that the two groups were intermixed throughout the tree and in some cases resided in the same clade, suggesting recent divergence from a common ancestor. Phylogenetic comparison of the 77 Thai genomes with 286 K. pneumoniae from a global collection showed that Thai isolates were closely related to the clinical sub-population of the global collection, indicating that Thai clinical isolates belonged to globally circulating lineages. Dating of four Thai K. pneumoniae clades indicated that they emerged between 50 and 150 years ago. Despite their phylogenetic relatedness, virulence factors and β-lactamase resistance genes were more numerous in clinical than in environmental isolates. Our results indicate that clinical and environmental K. pneumoniae are closely related, but that hospitals may select for isolates with a more resistant and virulent genotype. CONCLUSIONS: These findings highlight the clinical relevance of environmental K. pneumoniae isolates
Whole genome sequencing of ESBL-producing Escherichia coli isolated from patients, farm waste and canals in Thailand.
BACKGROUND: Tackling multidrug-resistant Escherichia coli requires evidence from One Health studies that capture numerous potential reservoirs in circumscribed geographic areas. METHODS: We conducted a survey of extended β-lactamase (ESBL)-producing E. coli isolated from patients, canals and livestock wastewater in eastern Thailand between 2014 and 2015, and analyzed isolates using whole genome sequencing. RESULTS: The bacterial collection of 149 isolates consisted of 84 isolates from a single hospital and 65 from the hospital sewer, canals and farm wastewater within a 20 km radius. E. coli ST131 predominated the clinical collection (28.6%), but was uncommon in the environment. Genome-based comparison of E. coli from infected patients and their immediate environment indicated low genetic similarity overall between the two, although three clinical-environmental isolate pairs differed by ≤ 5 single nucleotide polymorphisms. Thai E. coli isolates were dispersed throughout a phylogenetic tree containing a global E. coli collection. All Thai ESBL-positive E. coli isolates were multidrug resistant, including high rates of resistance to tobramycin (77.2%), gentamicin (77.2%), ciprofloxacin (67.8%) and trimethoprim (68.5%). ESBL was encoded by six different CTX-M elements and SHV-12. Three isolates from clinical samples (n = 2) or a hospital sewer (n = 1) were resistant to the carbapenem drugs (encoded by NDM-1, NDM-5 or GES-5), and three isolates (clinical (n = 1) and canal water (n = 2)) were resistant to colistin (encoded by mcr-1); no isolates were resistant to both carbapenems and colistin. CONCLUSIONS: Tackling ESBL-producing E. coli in this setting will be challenging based on widespread distribution, but the low prevalence of resistance to carbapenems and colistin suggests that efforts are now required to prevent these from becoming ubiquitous
Melioidosis in Animals, Thailand, 2006–2010
We retrospectively estimated the incidence of culture-proven melioidosis in animals in Thailand during 2006–2010. The highest incidence was in goats (1.63/100,000/year), followed by incidence in pigs and cattle. The estimated incidence of melioidosis in humans in a given region paralleled that of melioidosis in goats
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Miniaturised broth microdilution for simplified antibiotic susceptibility testing of Gram negative clinical isolates using microcapillary devices
Antibiotic resistance is a major global challenge. Although microfluidic antibiotic susceptibility tests (AST) offer great potential for rapid and portable testing to inform correct antibiotic selection, the impact of miniaturisation on broth microdilution (BMD) is not fully understood.
We developed a 10-plex microcapillary based broth microdilution using resazurin as a colorimetric indicator for bacterial growth. Each capillary had a 1 microlitre capillary volume, 100 times smaller than microplate broth microdilution. The microcapillary BMD was compared to an in-house standard microplate AST and commercial Vitek 2 system.
When tested with 25 uropathogenic isolates (20 Escherichia coli and 5 Klebsiella pneumoniae) and 2 reference E. coli, these devices gave 96.1% (441/459 isolate/antibiotic combinations) categorical agreement, across 17 therapeutically beneficial antibiotics, compared to in-house microplate BMD with resazurin. A further 99 (50 E. coli and 49 K. pneumoniae) clinical isolates were tested against 10 antibiotics and showed 92.3% categorical (914/990 isolate/antibiotic combinations) compared to the Vitek 2 measurements.
These microcapillary tests showed excellent analytical agreement to existing AST methods. Furthermore, the small size and simple colour change can be recorded using a smartphone camera or it is feasible to follow growth kinetics using very simple, low-cost readers. The test strips used here are produced in large batches, allowing hundreds of multiplex tests to be made and tested rapidly. Demonstrating performance of miniaturised broth microdilution with clinical isolates paves the way for wider use of microfluidic AST
Additional file 3: Table S2. of Whole genome sequencing reveals high-resolution epidemiological links between clinical and environmental Klebsiella pneumoniae
Supplemental Table S2, which includes the list of putative virulence factor genes. (CSV 9 kb
Additional file 4: Table S3. of Whole genome sequencing reveals high-resolution epidemiological links between clinical and environmental Klebsiella pneumoniae
Supplemental Table S3, which includes the list of β-lactamase genes and ESBLs. (CSV 5 kb
Additional file 2: Figures S1–S6. of Whole genome sequencing reveals high-resolution epidemiological links between clinical and environmental Klebsiella pneumoniae
Figures and descriptions of Supplemental Figures S1–S6 mentioned throughout the manuscript. (DOCX 1927 kb
Additional file 4: Table S3. of Whole genome sequencing of ESBL-producing Escherichia coli isolated from patients, farm waste and canals in Thailand
Genetic context of mcr-1 and carbapenem resistance genes. (XLSX 9 kb
Additional file 2: Table S2. of Whole genome sequencing of ESBL-producing Escherichia coli isolated from patients, farm waste and canals in Thailand
Sequence quality metrics. (XLSX 495 kb