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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, September 1998, p. 2590-2596, Vol. 36, No. 9
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Intercontinental Spread of a Multidrug-Resistant
MethicillinResistant Staphylococcus aureus
Clone
M. Aires
de
Sousa,1
I. Santos
Sanches,1,2
M. L.
Ferro,3
M. J.
Vaz,4
Z.
Saraiva,5
T.
Tendeiro,5
J.
Serra,5 and
H.
de
Lencastre1,2,6,*
Unidade de Genética Molecular,
Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica da
Universidade Nova de Lisboa (ITQB/UNL),
Oeiras,1
Faculdade de Ciências e
Tecnologia, Universidade Nova de Lisboa (FCT/UNL), Monte da
Caparica,2
Hospital de São
João, Oporto,4 and
Hospital de
São José3 and
Instituto
Português de Oncologia de Francisco
Gentil,5 Lisbon, Portugal, and
Laboratory of Microbiology, The Rockefeller University, New
York, New York6
Received 6 April 1998/Returned for modification 15 May
1998/Accepted 28 May 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
Two hundred ten methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA) isolates recovered between 1990 and 1997 from three
Portuguese hospitals located in Lisbon and Oporto were analyzed by
molecular fingerprinting techniques. The hybridization of
ClaI restriction digests with the mecA- and
Tn554-specific DNA probes combined with
pulsed-field gel electrophoresis documented the abrupt appearance and
extensive intrahospital spread of the Brazilian epidemic MRSA clone in
the 1995 samples of each one of the three hospitals
analyzed
suggesting the intercontinental transfer of this strain
from Brazil to Portugal. The appearance of this clone may challenge the
dominance of another highly epidemic imported clone
the Iberian MRSA,
currently the most widely spread MRSA clone in Portuguese hospitals.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has become one of the
highest-ranking nosocomial pathogens throughout the world,
capable of causing a wide range of hospital infections. MRSA
remains a particularly serious problem in Portugal because of the
alarmingly high incidence and multidrug resistance of the strains. The
percentage of MRSA strains accounting for S. aureus infections in Portugal according to the European Prevalence of Infection in Intensive Care study carried out in 1992 was estimated as
close to 65% (26). The incidence of MRSA according to
two national multicenter studies was estimated as 49% in 1993 (10) and 47% in 1994 (9). These high
values are presumably related to the inappropriate use of antimicrobial
drugs and to insufficient infection control measures in Portuguese
hospitals (9). In addition, many of the contemporary MRSA
strains were multiresistant and were often untypeable with the
international set of phages. For such strains, molecular typing
techniques have begun to replace conventional typing methods in
epidemiological investigations (2, 3, 19, 20, 22, 25).
By some of these methods, previous studies have documented the
emergence of two particularly widely disseminated multiresistant clones
of MRSA. One of these, the Iberian MRSA, first identified as the
dominant clone in a major outbreak of MRSA disease in the Bellvitge
Hospital in Barcelona, Spain, in 1989 (5), was subsequently detected in at least eight Portuguese hospitals (1, 13,
15-18) as well as in hospitals in western Scotland, United
Kingdom; Rome, Italy; Brussels, Belgium; and Hanover, Germany
(7), and in one hospital in New York City (14). A
second and distinct multiresistant clone (Brazilian MRSA) was shown to
be widely spread in Brazilian hospitals, separated by several thousand
kilometers from one another (21).
Monitoring the geographic expansion of such epidemic clones is
important for understanding why certain MRSA clones spread over
considerable distances whereas others are limited to a single country.
While a continuously operating nosocomial surveillance system is not
yet functioning in Portugal, a substantial number of MRSA isolates
became available to us from strain collections recovered between 1990 and 1997 in three Portuguese hospitals located in the two largest
cities (Lisbon and Oporto) of Portugal.
In this paper, we describe the characterization of these strains
by molecular typing techniques. While the size of samples available from these sources at the different collection periods was
not uniform, our molecular data clearly document the arrival of the
Brazilian MRSA clone in Portugal and also suggest a rapid increase in
the representation of this clone during the surveillance period. The
finding suggests transfer of this clone from Brazil to Portugal.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial isolates and antimicrobial susceptibility.
A
collection of 210 isolates of MRSA was obtained from three hospitals
located in the two largest Portuguese cities: the first group of
isolates came from Hospital de São João in Oporto and was
characterized at the Faculdade de Farmácia do Porto (FFP) (96 FFP
isolates); the second and third groups of isolates were from two
hospitals in Lisbon: Hospital de São José (HSJ) (91 HSJ
isolates) and Instituto Português de Oncologia de Francisco Gentil (IPO) (23 IPO isolates), respectively. Of the 96 FFP isolates, 9 were isolated in 1990, 9 were isolated in 1991, 14 were isolated in
1992, and 64 were isolated in 1996. The percentage of MRSA strains
was estimated in this hospital as 32% during 1990 to 1992 and as
65% in 1996. Among the 91 HSJ isolates, 36 isolates were recovered in
1995, 36 were recovered in 1996, and 19 were recovered in 1997. The
percentage of MRSA strains was estimated in this hospital as 71%
in 1995 and 1996 and as 72% in 1997. The 23 IPO isolates were all
collected in 1997 when the percentage of MRSA strains in this hospital
was estimated as close to 25%. Efforts were made to maximize the
chance that the collection of isolates reflected the composition of the
MRSA flora in the particular hospital during the surveillance period.
For this reason, single patient isolates (with one exception) recovered
from a wide variety of infection sites (sputum, pus, blood, bronchial
secretions, and urine) and from several hospital wards (medicine,
surgery, intensive care unit [ICU], dermatology, and burn unit) were
used in the molecular analysis.
Antibiotic susceptibilities were tested by disk diffusion methods
(12) or Vitek or ATB systems (BioMérieux, Marcy
l'Etoile, France). A rapid screening for the methicillin resistance
phenotype (homogeneous or heterogeneous [24]) was
performed by the methicillin 1-mg disk method (4), and the
presence of the mecA gene was confirmed in all strains by
DNA hybridization (3) or PCR analysis (11).
Resistance to 500 µg of spectinomycin per ml (6) was evaluated by spotting 5-µl drops of overnight-grown cultures
(109 to 1010 CFU/ml) onto tryptic soy agar
plates containing this concentration of the antibiotic.
Control strains.
Isolates representing the clonal types of
the Iberian (strains HPV34, HPV107 [17], and PER34
[5]), Brazilian (strain HU25 [21]),
and Portuguese (strain CPS21 [3]) MRSA clones were
obtained from strain collections at the Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica and The Rockefeller University.
mecA and Tn554 polymorphisms.
The
purification of whole genomic DNA was performed according to methods
already established for S. aureus (3).
Chromosomal DNA was digested with the restriction endonuclease
Bsp106 (isoschizomer of ClaI) (Stratagene, La
Jolla, Calif.), and the membrane was hybridized with the
mecA- and the Tn554-specific DNA probes
(3). DNA fragments were transferred to Hybond N+
(Amersham International, Little Chalfont, United Kingdom) nylon membranes (3) and hybridized with a nonradioactive probe
labeled with the RPN 3040 ECL system (Amersham International).
Hybridization patterns involving mecA or Tn554
were identified by comparison with previously described types (3,
5, 6).
PFGE.
Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) after
digestion with SmaI enzyme (New England Biolabs, Beverly,
Mass.) was carried out in an LKB Pharmacia 2015 Gene Navigator
apparatus-Pulsaphor system (Pharmacia LKB, Stockholm, Sweden). The
running conditions have already been described elsewhere
(16). Interpretation was performed with previously
determined criteria (23).
Random amplification of polymorphic DNA (RAPD).
Forty-two
isolates representing PFGE subtype variants, different mecA
polymorphs, and variants of Tn554 type were also examined by
RAPD as a potential confirmatory method. DNA isolation and PCR were
performed essentially as described before (1), and two
different primers were included in the typing assays. The designations
and sequences of the primers were as follows: ERIC1, 5'-ATGTAAGCTCCTGGGGATTCAC-3'; ERIC2,
5'-AAGTAAGTGACTGGGGTGACGC-3' (27). The
amplification was performed in a Perkin-Elmer 9600 PCR machine
(Perkin-Elmer, Norwalk, Conn.) and consisted of the following steps:
predenaturation at 94°C for 4 min and 40 cycles of 45 s at
94°C, 45 s at 25°C, and 90 s at 74°C. PCR products were
separated by 1% agarose gel electrophoresis. After photography, DNA
fingerprints were compared by visual inspection. New RAPD types were
defined on the basis of two band differences and identified with
capital letters; patterns that differed in a single band were indicated
by a prime after the capital letter.
 |
RESULTS |
Antibiotic resistance phenotype.
Analyzing the
antibiotic susceptibilities to the common panel of six
antibiotics tested with the 210 isolates showed 100% resistance to
penicillin, methicillin, and oxacillin and 100% susceptibility to
vancomycin. All isolates except one were resistant to erythromycin, and
resistance to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (SXT) showed
strain-to-strain variation which paralleled clonal features of the
isolates (Table 1).
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TABLE 1.
Evolution of the clonal types found in three different
Portuguese hospitals between 1990 to 1992 and 1995 to 1997
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|
Among the 210 isolates, 149 strains (71%) were resistant to 500 µg
of spectinomycin per ml, 6 strains (3%) were intermediately resistant,
and 55 strains (26%) were susceptible.
Clonal assignments.
Strains were classified into clonal types
on the basis of a combination of their particular mecA and
Tn554 polymorphisms and PFGE patterns
(mecA::Tn554::PFGE types). Some of
the mecA polymorphs (I, II, III, and XI) and
Tn554 insertion patterns (E, J, NH, B, and DD) found in this
study were previously described (3, 5, 6). One new
ClaI-mecA type, XIII, and five novel
Tn554 patterns named
, B', µµ, 
, and
were
found in this study.
Hospital de São João.
Of the nine isolates
recovered during 1990 from the Hospital de São João (FFP
isolates), two isolates (22%) belonged to clonal type
I::E::A while the other seven (78%) strains
belonged to clonal type III::
::C (Table
2).
Eight of the nine FFP isolates from 1991 belonged to clonal type
III::
::C (89%); the remaining single strain had
a completely different and novel clonal type,
XIII::
::D (Table 2). The new mecA
type, XIII, has two hybridization bands of approximately 7.7 and
2.2 kb. The new Tn554 pattern
corresponds probably to a
single insertion of the transposon. Interestingly, in this strain the
Tn554 hybridization produced only one band, of approximately 4.2 kb, suggesting either the absence of a ClaI restriction
site or deletion of part of Tn554.
The study of 14 isolates recovered during 1992 from the Hospital de
São João allowed the identification of four clonal types (Table 2). Twelve strains belonged to previously identified clones: I::E::A (n = 7 [50%]) and
III::
::C (n = 5 [36%]). A
single isolate, I::J::A, might have evolved from
the clone I::E::A, because it differs only in the
number of insertions of Tn554. The prevalence of clone
I::E::A and its related clone
I::J::A was 57% in 1992 (Table 1). The remaining
isolate belonged to a new clone, III::
::E. This
clonal type was probably unrelated to III::
::C
because it differs in more than six SmaI fragments
(23).
The analysis of the 64 FFP isolates collected during 1996 allowed
the identification of six different clones (Table 2). Clonal type
I::E::A and the related clones
I::J::A (duplication of Tn554) and
I::NH::A (loss of Tn554) represented the
majority of the isolates (55%). Most interesting was the appearance of
two new clones, XI::B::B (33%) and
XI::B'::B (10%), representing together 43% of the isolates, which had molecular features characteristic
of MRSA from Brazil (21). The mecA polymorph of
the Brazilian clone was originally assigned the number III
(21); upon careful comparison with other isolates belonging
to patterns III (strain RN7164 [6]), IX (strain PER168
[5]), and XI (strain PER222
[5]), it seems that a more correct assignment is
mecA polymorph XI (Fig. 1). The new Tn554 pattern B' is probably related to
pattern B (it differs only in a ClaI restriction site of one
of the three insertions of the transposon). A single isolate was
assigned the clonal type II::NH::F. Interestingly,
two isolates collected with an 11-day interval from the same product
(bronchial secretions) of the same patient hospitalized in the thorax
surgery unit belonged to clones I::E::A and
XI::B::B. Furthermore, the cooccurrence of clonal types I::E::A and XI::B::B was
found in several wards or units in this hospital: medicine (three
wards), surgery (two wards), emergency, neurology, infectious disease
unit, and ICU.

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FIG. 1.
ClaI-mecA hybridization profiles
of some isolates belonging to the Brazilian clone. Chromosomal DNAs
digested with ClaI were separated by conventional gel
electrophoresis, transferred to a nylon membrane, and hybridized with a
mecA DNA probe. Lanes MW, 1-kb ladder (BRL); lane 1, strain
from Hospital Universitario Clementino Fraga Filho, Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil (HU25; genuine representative of the Brazilian clone
[21]); lanes 2 to 4, control strains (RN7164, type III
[6], PER168, type IX [5], and PER222,
type XI [5]); lane 5, strain from Hospital de
São João (FFP200, type XI); lane 6, strain from HSJ (HSJ7,
type XI); lane 7, strain from IPO (IPO118, type XI). Numbers at right
show molecular size in kilobases.
|
|
HSJ.
The 36 HSJ isolates of 1995 were divided between two
major clones, I::E::A (47%) and
XI::B::B (47%) (Table
3). The two remaining isolates were
I::NH::A (loss of Tn554) and
I::J::A (duplication of Tn554), probably
related to I::E::A. The prevalence of clone I::E::A and its relatives
(I::J::A and I::NH::A) was 53%
in 1995 (Table 1).
Among the 35 isolates recovered during 1996, clonal types
I::E::A and XI::B::B remained
the main clones (50 and 33% of the isolates, respectively) (Table 3).
Sporadic clones related to I::E::A showing
variation in the mecA polymorph or in the
Tn554 pattern but sharing the PFGE type A, represented
by single isolates, were also abundant:
I::J::A, I::DD::A,
II::DD::A, I::µµ::A,
and I::
::A. Clonal type
XI::
::B, represented by a single isolate, may
have evolved from XI::B::B, because it differs only
in the number of insertions of the Tn554 transposon. The new
Tn554 types µµ and 
contained probably four and
five insertions, respectively, as suggested by the 8 to 10 ClaI hybridization fragments. Pattern
contains two
insertions (four hybridization fragments).
Clonal types I::E::A and
XI::B::B and their related clones were represented
in 1996 by 65 and 36% of isolates, respectively. In 1997 (a total of
19 isolates), the scenario of two major clones was maintained:
I::E::A and its related clone
I::DD::A (which included a single isolate)
represented 47% of the isolates, while XI::B::B
was found in 53% of the isolates (Table 1).
IPO.
Clonal type I::E::A with its related
clone I::J::A was found to be the dominant clone
among the 23 IPO isolates recovered during 1997 (70%), while clone
XI::B::B was represented by 30% (Table
4). Clonal types
I::E::A and XI::B::B were found
in distinct surgical services with the exception of one service
(designated CI) where both clones were found.
I::E::A was found in two other surgical services
(pediatrics and CVII), while clonal type XI::B::B was found in the ICU.
RAPD analysis.
A group of 42 strains representing different
clonal types (defined by a combination of mecA and
Tn554 polymorphism and PFGE pattern) were also
examined by RAPD with primers ERIC1 and ERIC2 as a potential
confirmatory method (Table 2). RAPD type A'D was found in association
with all the strains belonging to mecA polymorph III or
XI independently of their Tn554 pattern and PFGE type
(III::
::C, III::
::E,
XI::B::B, XI::B'::B, and
XI::
::B were RAPD type A'D). A second RAPD
pattern, AA, was shared by all strains with mecA type I but
also by the unique isolate II::DD::A.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Differential resolving powers of various genotypic methods.
The resolving power of the RAPD analysis by the particular primers used
was limited and found to be similar to the resolving power of Southern
hybridization of ClaI digests with the mecA probe, as was observed in a previous work (1). The
RAPD analysis could not distinguish strains belonging to the
Portuguese clone (III::
::C) and the Brazilian
clone; however, it was able to differentiate strains included in the
two major clones (I::E::A [Iberian clone] and
XI::B::B [Brazilian clone]). In fact, these two
clones represented together the majority of the MRSA isolates recovered
since 1995 in these three hospitals as well as in several other
Portuguese hospitals, whereas the so-called Portuguese MRSA clone was
seen as sporadic or absent since 1992. The single strain of this study belonging to clonal type II::NH::F (FFP 311) showed
a unique RAPD pattern (BC) in confirmation of a previous finding with a
different collection of MRSA isolates (1).
Of all the molecular fingerprinting methods used alone, PFGE with
SmaI-digested DNA provided the highest degree of
discrimination (FFP, 12 subtypes of A, 10 subtypes of B, and 12 subtypes of C; HSJ, 12 subtypes of A and 7 subtypes of B; IPO, 4 subtypes of A and 1 subtype of B). PFGE used in combination with
mecA and Tn554 typing was able to resolve the 210 MRSA isolates into 14 clonal types. Compared to RAPD, the PFGE method
remains labor-intensive and time-consuming. Nevertheless, PFGE under
carefully controlled conditions can yield highly reproducible results
with a resolving power unmatched by any of the other currently used
molecular typing methods.
The Iberian and Brazilian MRSA clones among the Portuguese MRSA
isolates.
Of the 210 MRSA strains recovered in the three
Portuguese hospitals, the overwhelming majority of bacteria (182 of the
210, or 87%) belonged to one of two clonal types (as defined by
mecA::Tn554::PFGE pattern):
the Iberian clone (I::E::A) (together with a few
[eight] isolates carrying the closely related clonal type
I::NH::A or I::J::A) was
represented by 107 isolates, and the Brazilian clone (XI::B::B) was represented by 75 isolates (together
with eight isolates belonging to the closely related clone
XI::B'::B or XI::
::B).
Changes in MRSA clonal types
with time.
Molecular typing
studies performed in the period between 1985 and 1997 allowed
construction of a tentative temporal scheme for the evolution of
the clonal profile of MRSA in Portuguese hospitals. At least two
epidemiologically important events were recorded: the replacement
of clone III::
::C (the Portuguese MRSA), widespread in Portuguese hospitals in the mid-1980s and early 1990s, by
the Iberian clone of MRSA (I::E::A) and the
appearance and step increase in prevalence of the Brazilian clone of
MRSA in the mid- to late 1990s.
Clonal type III::
::C was predominant in the
Hospital de São João in the 1990 (78%) and 1991 (89%)
samples (Table 1). The same clonal type was also dominant in the
Hospital Dona Estefânia of Lisbon in 1985 (3), and
this clone was detected widely in other Portuguese hospitals as well
during surveillance in the early 1990s (15-17). By 1992, the prevalence of clone III::
::C declined to
36% in Hospital de São João and was no longer detectable in collections from the HSJ (Lisbon) and the IPO (Lisbon) (Table 1).
Clonal type I::E::A was not detectable during
the MRSA outbreak in Hospital Dona Estefânia in 1985 (3), and this clone was a minor one in the 1990 and
1991 samples from the Hospital de São João (Oporto). In
1992, the representation of clone I::E::A (the
Iberian clone [17]) together with the related clone
I::J::A increased to 57% in the Hospital de
São João, and by 1995, this clone represented up to or
above 50% of MRSA strains in the three hospitals studied (70% of
isolates in the 1997 sample from the IPO) (Table 1).
The Iberian clone (Fig. 2) was found to
be dominant in Spain already in 1989 (5), while in Portugal,
this clone seems to have peaked only in 1992 to 1993 in several
hospitals (13, 15-18). This observation suggests that
during 1992 there was a clonal replacement of the Portuguese
clone by the Iberian clone.

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FIG. 2.
PFGE of SmaI macrorestriction fragments of
MRSA clinical isolates. Lanes 1 and 12, molecular size standards
(lambda oligomers); lanes 2 and 13, NCTC8325; lanes 3 to 7, representatives of the Iberian clone; lane 3, strain from Hospital de
Bellvitge Princeps d'Espanya, Barcelona, Spain (PER34; genuine
representative of the Iberian clone; PFGE type A [5]);
lane 4, strain from Hospital Pulido Valente, Lisbon, Portugal (HPV107,
PFGE type A7 [17]); lane 5, strain from Hospital de
São João (FFP202, PFGE type A1); lane 6, strain from HSJ
(HSJ18, PFGE type A2); lane 7, strain from IPO (IPO116, PFGE type A1);
lanes 8 to 11, representatives of the Brazilian clone; lane 8, strain
from Hospital Universitario Clementino Fraga Filho, Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil (HU25; genuine representative of the Brazilian clone
[21]); lane 9, strain from Hospital de São
João (FFP200, PFGE type B1); lane 10, strain from HSJ (HSJ7, PFGE
type B1); lane 11, strain from IPO (IPO118, PFGE type B1). Numbers at
left show molecular size in kilobases.
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|
The molecular characterization of MRSA isolates recovered in the three
Portuguese hospitals documents the occurrence of a second major
epidemiological event since 1995. Since 1995, the dominance of
the Iberian clone appears to have been challenged in the three
hospitals studied in this work by the arrival of a new MRSA clone
with the clonal type assignment XI::B::B. This MRSA
clone, previously named the Brazilian MRSA (Fig. 2), was found to be
widely spread over large distances in Brazil (21) in a
survey of 1992 to 1994, and the clone appears to have retained high
prevalence in that country in 1996 to 1998 (2a). MRSA clone XI::B::B was found in Portugal since 1995 with
percentages that show a tendency to increase through the years. In the
case of the HSJ in 1997, it may even have overtaken the Iberian clone (53 versus 47%) (Table 1). A similar situation was found in another Portuguese hospital situated between Lisbon and Oporto (13). A previous study in the IPO showed that the prevalence of clone XI::B::B was already significant (12%) in 1995 (18).
Distinct antibiotic resistance profiles of the Iberian
and Brazilian MRSA clones.
All strains belonging to
the Iberian clone (I::E::A) were susceptible to
SXT, while 95% of the strains belonging to the Brazilian clone
(XI::B::B) were resistant to this antibiotic
and one isolate showed intermediate resistance. A previous study
of the Iberian clone in Spain showed the same result (5),
and all strains belonging to the Brazilian clone isolated in
Brazil showed resistance to SXT (21).
Interestingly, all MRSA isolates carrying the mecA polymorph
I, irrespective of their Tn554 or PFGE types
(I::J::A, I::NH::A, I::DD::A, I::µµ::A, and
I::
::A), showed susceptibility to SXT. Similarly, MRSA isolates carrying the mecA polymorph XI but
differing from the Brazilian clone in Tn554 type (e.g.,
isolates XI::B'::B and
XI::
::B) showed in the majority of the
cases resistance to SXT. The Portuguese clone
(III::
::C) could not be distinguished from the
Iberian clone by SXT resistance.
Another correlation between clonal type and drug resistance concerns
susceptibility to spectinomycin. All strains belonging to clonal type
I::E::A or related clones harboring the
Tn554 transposon showed high-level resistance to 500 µg of
spectinomycin per ml, while the majority of the isolates belonging to
the Brazilian clone (clonal type XI::B::B or the
related clone XI::B'::B) (51 of 74 [69%]) were
susceptible to this drug. It should be remembered that the Brazilian
MRSA isolates carry three copies of Tn554 (21). The mechanism responsible for the lack of resistance in these strains
is not known. All strains belonging to the Portuguese clone
(III::
::C) remained resistant to spectinomycin.
The observations described in this communication clearly establish the
appearance of the Brazilian clone of MRSA in Portuguese hospitals. The
most conservative interpretation of this finding is the transfer of
this clone from South America to Portugal. A similar intercontinental
transfer of a major epidemic clone of multiresistant
Streptococcus pneumoniae was recently documented by
molecular epidemiological techniques (8). The appearance of
the Brazilian clone in Portugal may be linked to the increase in
migration of human populations since 1992 to 1993 between these two
Portuguese-speaking countries (primarily from Brazil to Portugal), particularly health care personnel, and to the absence of effective control barriers in Portuguese hospitals for colonized or infected patients prior to hospitalization.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This work was partially supported by project PSAU/SAU/1591/92 of
the Ministério da Saúde (Portugal), project
STRDA/C/BIO/360/92 from the Junta Nacional de Investigação
Científica (Portugal), CEM/NET Project 31 from IBET, project
2/2.1/BIO/1154/95 from PRAXIS XXI, and a grant from the
Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian. M. Aires de Sousa was
supported by a grant (BTL 6260/95) from PRAXIS XXI.
We thank M. E. Velazquez Meza from the Instituto Nacional de Salud
Publica, Centro de Investigacion sobre Enfermedades Infecciosas, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico, for the excellent technical assistance with the IPO strains during the CEM/NET training program at the Molecular Genetics Unit of ITQB/UNL, Oeiras, Portugal. We express our gratitude to Alexander Tomasz for stimulating discussions.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: The Rockefeller
University, 1230 York Ave., New York, NY 10021. Phone: (212) 327-8278. Fax: (212) 327-8688. E-mail:
lencash{at}rockvax.rockefeller.edu.
 |
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