Current Microbiology, Vol.68, No.2, 227-232, 2014
pIMP-PH114 Carrying bla (IMP-4) in a Klebsiella pneumoniae Strain is Closely Related to Other Multidrug-Resistant IncA/C-2 Plasmids
The IncA/C plasmids are broad host-range vehicles which have been associated with wide dissemination of CMY-2 among Enterobacteriaceae of human and animal origins. Acquired metallo-beta-lactamases (MBLs) such as the IMP-type enzymes are increasingly reported in multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria worldwide, particularly in Enterobacteriaceae. We described the complete sequence of the first IMP-4-encoding IncA/C-2 plasmid, pIMP-PH114 (151,885 bp), from a sequence type 1 Klebsiella pneumoniae strain that was recovered from a patient who was hospitalized in the Philippines. pIMP-PH114 consists of a backbone from the IncA/C-2 plasmids, with the insertion of a novel Tn21-like class 1 integron composite structure (containing the cassette array bla (IMP-4)-qacG-aacA4-catB3, followed by a class C beta-lactamase bla (DHA-1) and the mercury resistance operon, merRTPCADE) and a sul2-floR encoding region. Phylogenetic analysis of the IncA/C repA sequences showed that pIMP-PH114 formed a subgroup with other IncA/C plasmids involved in the international spread of CMY-2, TEM-24 and NDM-1. Identical bla (IMP-4) arrays have been described among different Enterobacteriaceae and Acinetobacter spp. in China, Singapore and Australia but the genetic context is different. The broad host range of IncA/C plasmids may have facilitated dissemination of the bla (IMP-4) arrays among different diverse groups of bacteria.