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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, September 1998, p. 2460-2464, Vol. 36, No. 9
Department of
Microbiology,1
Laboratory of Bacterial
Drug Resistance,3 and
Department of
Laboratory Medicine and Clinical Laboratory
Center,2 Gunma University School of
Medicine, Maebashi, Gunma, Japan
Received 30 January 1998/Returned for modification 24 March
1998/Accepted 12 May 1998
A total of 1,799 Enterococcus faecalis isolates were
isolated from inpatients of Gunma University Hospital, Gunma, Japan, between 1992 and 1996. Four hundred thirty-two (22.3%) of the 1,799 isolates had high-level gentamicin resistance. Eighty-one of the 432 isolates were classified and were placed into four groups (group A
through group D) with respect to the EcoRI restriction endonuclease profiles of the plasmid DNAs isolated from these strains.
The 81 isolates were isolated from 36 patients. For 35 of the 36 patients, the same gentamicin-resistant isolates were isolated
from the same or different specimens isolated from the same patient at
different times during the hospitalization. For one other patient, two
different groups of the isolates were isolated from the same
specimen. Groups A, B, C, and D were isolated from 5, 14, 12, and 6 patients, respectively. The strains had multiple-drug resistance. The
restriction endonuclease digestion patterns of the E. faecalis chromosomal DNAs isolated from isolates in the same
group were also identical. The patients who had been infected with the
gentamicin-resistant isolates from each group were geographically clustered on a ward(s). These results suggest that the isolates in each
group were derived from a common source and had spread in the ward. The
gentamicin-resistant isolates exhibited a clumping response upon
exposure to pheromone (E. faecalis FA2-2
culture filtrate). The gentamicin resistance transferred at a high
frequency to the recipient E. faecalis isolates by broth mating, and the pheromone-responsive plasmids encoding the gentamicin resistance were identified in these isolates.
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Evidence of Nosocomial Infection in Japan Caused by High-Level
Gentamicin-Resistant Enterococcus faecalis and
Identification of the Pheromone-Responsive Conjugative Plasmid
Encoding Gentamicin Resistance
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, Gunma University School of Medicine, Showa-machi 3-39-22, Maebashi, Gunma 371-8511, Japan. Phone: 81-27-220-7990. Fax:
81-27-220-7996. E-mail: yasuike{at}sb.gunma-u.ac.jp.
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