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      Plasmid-mediated high-level resistance to aminoglycosides in Enterobacteriaceae due to 16S rRNA methylation.

      Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
      Amino Acid Sequence, Aminoglycosides, Anti-Bacterial Agents, pharmacology, Bacterial Proteins, biosynthesis, genetics, DNA, Bacterial, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial, Enterobacteriaceae, drug effects, enzymology, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Methylation, Methyltransferases, metabolism, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Molecular Sequence Data, Plasmids, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S

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          Abstract

          A self-transferable plasmid of ca. 80 kb, pIP1204, conferred multiple-antibiotic resistance to Klebsiella pneumoniae BM4536, which was isolated from a urinary tract infection. Resistance to beta-lactams was due to the bla(TEM1) and bla(CTX-M) genes, resistance to trimethroprim was due to the dhfrXII gene, resistance to sulfonamides was due to the sul1 gene, resistance to streptomycin-spectinomycin was due to the ant3"9 gene, and resistance to nearly all remaining aminoglycosides was due to the aac3-II gene and a new gene designated armA (aminoglycoside resistance methylase). The cloning of armA into a plasmid in Escherichia coli conferred to the new host high-level resistance to 4,6-disubstituted deoxystreptamines and fortimicin. The deduced sequence of ArmA displayed from 37 to 47% similarity to those of 16S rRNA m(7)G methyltransferases from various actinomycetes, which confer resistance to aminoglycoside-producing strains. However, the low guanine-plus-cytosine content of armA (30%) does not favor an actinomycete origin for the gene. It therefore appears that posttranscriptional modification of 16S rRNA can confer high-level broad-range resistance to aminoglycosides in gram-negative human pathogens.

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