Genetic relatedness in carbapenem-resistant isolates from clinical specimens in Ghana using ERIC-PCR technique
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PLOS ONE
Abstract
Aim
Enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus (ERIC) sequence analysis is a powerful tool
for epidemiological analysis of bacterial species. This study aimed to determine the genetic
relatedness or variability in carbapenem-resistant isolates by species using this technique.
Methods
A total of 111 non-duplicated carbapenem-resistant (CR) Gram-negative bacilli isolates
from a three-year collection period (2012–2014) were investigated by enterobacterial repeti tive intergenic consensus-polymerase chain reaction (ERIC–PCR) in four selected hospital
laboratories in Ghana. The isolates were also screened for carbapenemase and extended
spectrum β-lactamase genes by PCR.
Results
A proportion of 23.4% (26/111) of the genomic DNA extracts were carriers of PCR-positive
carbapenemase genes, including 14.4% blaNDM-1, 7.2% blaVIM-1 and 1.8% blaOXA-48.
The highest prevalence of carbapenemase genes was from non-fermenters, Acinetobacter
baumannii and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. For the ESBL genes tested, 96.4% (107/111) of
the CR isolates co-harboured both TEM-1 and SHV-1 genes. The ERIC-PCR gel analysis
exhibited 1 to 8 bands ranging from 50 to 800 bp. Band patterns of 93 complex dissimilarities
were visually distinguished from the 111 CR isolates studied, while the remaining 18 showed
band similarities in pairs.
Conclusion
Overall, ERIC-PCR fingerprints have shown a high level of diversity among the species of
Gram-negative bacterial pathogens and specimen collection sites in this study. ERIC-PCR optimisation assays may serve as a suitable genotyping tool for the assessment of genetic
diversity or close relatedness of isolates that are found in clinical settings.
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Research Article
