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  • Advantage of the F2A1B- Inc...
    Maherault, Anne-Claire; Kemble, Harry; Magnan, Mélanie; Gachet, Benoit; Roche, David; Le Nagard, Hervé; Tenaillon, Olivier; Denamur, Erick; Branger, Catherine; Landraud, Luce

    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2019, Letnik: 63, Številka: 10
    Journal Article

    Despite a fitness cost imposed on bacterial hosts, large conjugative plasmids play a key role in the diffusion of resistance determinants, such as CTX-M extended-spectrum beta-lactamases. Among the large conjugative plasmids, IncF plasmids are the most predominant group, and an F2A1B- IncF-type plasmid encoding a CTX-M-15 variant was recently described as being strongly associated with the emerging worldwide Escherichia coli sequence type 131 (ST131)-O25bH4 H30Rx/C2 sublineage. In this context, we investigated the fitness cost of narrow-range F-type plasmids, including the F2A1B- IncF-type CTX-M-15 plasmid, and of broad-range C-type plasmids in the K-12-like J53-2 E. coli strain. Although all plasmids imposed a significant fitness cost to the bacterial host immediately after conjugation, we show, using an experimental-evolution approach, that a negative impact on the fitness of the host strain was maintained throughout 1,120 generations with the IncC-IncR plasmid, regardless of the presence or absence of cefotaxime, in contrast to the F2 A1B- IncF plasmid, whose cost was alleviated. Many chromosomal and plasmid rear-rangements were detected after conjugation in transconjugants carrying the IncC plasmids but not in transconjugants carrying the F2A1B- IncF plasmid, except for insertion sequence (IS) mobilization from the filM gene leading to the restoration of motility of the recipient strains. Only a few mutations occurred on the chromosome of each transconjugant throughout the experimental-evolution assay. Our findings indicate that the F2A1B- IncF CTX-M-15 plasmid is well adapted to the E. coli strain studied, contrary to the IncC-IncR CTX-M-15 plasmid, and that such plasmid-host adaptation could participate in the evolutionary success of the CTX-M-15-producing pandemic E. coli ST131-O25bH4 lineage.