940 likes | 3.51k Views
Lecture 3 MRSA Methicillin resistant S. aureus. Tues – 1/15/2008. S. aureus – the pathogen. Microbiology – Gr+ cocci with many virulent factors (toxins and enzymes) Frequent nosocomial- and community-acquired pathogen Mode of transmission – contact Clinical manifestations:
E N D
Lecture 3MRSAMethicillin resistant S. aureus Tues – 1/15/2008
S. aureus – the pathogen • Microbiology – Gr+ cocci with many virulent factors (toxins and enzymes) • Frequent nosocomial- and community-acquired pathogen • Mode of transmission – contact • Clinical manifestations: • Skin and soft tissue infections • Pneumonia • Osteomyelitis / Arthritis • Bacteremia / Sepsis • Endocarditis • Toxin-mediated disease: TSS, Food poisining
S. aureus - Epidemiology • Epidemiologic niche: • Nasal carriage (anterior nares) • GI tract (rectal) • Perineal • Throat • Nasal carriage – 30% of adults • 20% Persistant carriers • 60% Transient carriers • 20% Never carriers • Nosocomial transmission – transient hand carriage
Risk groups with high carriage rates • Diabetes Mellitus • Dialysis patients • HIV • Chronic skin diseases • IV Drug abusers • Health care workers (?)
1st MRSA isolate ‘61 Antimicrobial resistance ofS. aureus - history SA genome sequence, Kuroda ‘01 CA-MRSA sequence, Baba ‘02 Cloning of mecA Matsuhashi ‘86 SCCmec sequenced Ito ‘99 MRSA single clone theory Lacey & Grinsted, ‘73 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2003 Epidemic spread of MRSA, Europe, India, Australia, USA 2nd wave of epidemic MRSA (MDR), USA, Australia, Ireland Increasing reports - CA-MRSA Worldwide dissemination CA-MRSA in Australia Introduction of Methicillin – ‘59 1st VISA, Japan ‘97 1st VRSA, USA ‘02
MRSA – mechanism – I • Horizontally transferred DNA element -SCCmec. • Site specific recombination. • mecA gene encodes PBP2a. • PBP2a = 78 KDa PBP - capable of cell wall synthesis. • PBP2a has low affinity for all -lactams.
MRSA - mechanism of resistance • Modifying enzymes • Degrading enzymes • Target Change • Efflux pumps
Mutation Plasmid transfer Transformation Genetic Mechanisms Horizontal vs. Vertical transmission Large genetic mobile elements (cassettes)
MRSA – mechanism-II • mecAis part of a large, mobile, genetic element –Staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (SCCmec)
Mec complex (class B) ccr complex (type2) orfX mecA IS431mec IS 1272 mecR1 SCCmec cassette • A unique class of mobile genetic element (21-67kb) • Resembles a pathogenicity island, but with no virulence genes. • Ccr complex: ccrA & ccrB encode recombinase A & B enable SCCmec to integrate into the chromosome in correct orientation. • Mec complex: encodes β-lactam resistance and its inducible regulation + transposons + integrated copies of plasmids that carry various resistance genes (non-b-lactam)
ccr complex(type 1) mec complex (class B) Mec complex (class B) Type IV SCCmec (24kb) ccr complex (type2) orfX mecA IS431mec IS 1272 mecR1 orfX TypeI SCCmec (34kb) mecR1 R-I ccrA1 ccrB1 mecA IS1272 IS431mec mec complex (class A) TypeII SCCmec (53kb) ccr complex(type 2) orfX pUB110 Tn554 ccrB2 ccrA2 IS431mec mecI mecR1 IS431mec mecA Type III SCCmec (67kb) mec complex (class A) ccr complex ccr complex (type3) orfX pT181 mer Tn554 ccrA3 mecI mecA Tn554 mecR1 ccrB3 IS431mec IS431 IS431
Genetic organization of SCCmec type I-VIde Lencastre et al. 2007
Origin of SCCmec and the mec gene • Single clonal origin theory • Hiramatsu et al. 1996: Clonal diversity: different strains developed independently • Origin of mecA gene - horizontal transfer from: • SCN • S. scuiri • Enterococcus hiriae
Prevalence of MRSA in USA(cumulative data 1998-2005)/ Shorr CID 2007
JAMA 1998 CID 2004 EID 2003 CA-MRSA – an emerging infection
X X CA-MRSA: 1996-2008Changing definitions • No contact with health-care facilities in prior 6-12 m. • Maybe more than 1y. • Resistant only to b-lactams, but not to other classes. • Resistant to quinolones, macrolides and others • SCCmec IV • and V … and VI…
CA-MRSA Skin, soft tissue infection ??? HA-MRSA Previous contact with health care system Longer hospitalization ICU admission or invasive procedures Ab Rx. Risk factors for MRSA
Clonal spread of MRSA • Spread is mainly clonal. Only few clones are the cause of most infections. • Major cause for clonal spread: lapses in IC • Yet - role of Ab pressure:…
Antibiotic consumption and MRSA, an ecologic study (EID 2004)
CA-MRSA infections in Texas (2002-2004) /Kaplan et al. CID 2005
How did CA-MRSA evolve? • Recent evolution of CA-MRSA from common MSSA? • “Hospital escape” of unsuccessful HA-MRSA
Mec complex (class B) ccr complex (type2) orfX • Small Size mecA IS431mec 24kb IS 1272 mecR1 SCCmec Type IV = “Mobile mec” • Novel SCCmec type • Smaller – more efficient horizontal transfer
Resistance and virulenceUS300 • Major CA-MRSA clones in US: US300 & US400 • US300 – the most common single clone of CA-MRSA • SCCmec IV • Resistant to ciprofloxacin (mutation in gyrA) • Many strains acquired MDR by plasmides (tetK, erm ) • Several mobile genetic elements • Several Toxins
Resistance and virulencePanton Valentine leukocidine • A pore forming cytotoxin • Strains containing pvl genes were associated with severe SST – infections • Direct role of pvl – still controversial
ACME – arc gene clusterComplete genome sequence of US300 /Diep et al. Lancet 2006 • Arginine Catabolic Mobile Element: virulence/strain survival factor • Different from native arc gene carried by all S. aureus • Highly similar to ACME from S. epidermidis • Arginine deiminase pathway • Inhibits the nitric oxide production • Allows survival in low ph, anaerobic conditions • Enhances fitness: enhances potential to grow and survive within a host
ST8 (US300) ACME positive isolates in UK / Ellington et al. JAC 2008 ST8 ACME neg ST97
How do we control MRSA? • Hospitals: • Infection control!!! • Antibiotic control?? • Community: • ?????
CA-MRSA Clindamycin ?? (high ery-R suggests inducible clinda-R) TMP-SMX? Rifampin? Vancomycin HA-MRSA Vancomycin Linezolid Daptomycin Treatment of MRSA