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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, July 2005, p. 3198-3202, Vol. 43, No. 7
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.7.3198-3202.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Genotyping of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus Strains from Two Hospitals in Bangalore, South India
Gayathri Arakere,1*
Savitha Nadig,1
Göte Swedberg,2
Ragini Macaden,3
Satish K. Amarnath,4 and
Dasarathy Raghunath1
Sir Dorabji Tata Centre for Research in Tropical Diseases, Bangalore, India,1
Department of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology, University of Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden,2
St. John's Medical College Hospital, Bangalore, India,3
Department of Microbiology, Manipal Hospital, Bangalore, India4
Received 25 November 2004/
Returned for modification 21 January 2005/
Accepted 23 March 2005

ABSTRACT
Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is a major
nosocomial pathogen in India, and up to 70% methicillin resistance
has been reported from hospitals in various parts of India.
Hospitals use phenotyping for the most part, and molecular genotyping
is not done. Here we report on the genotyping of 82 single-patient
isolates from two hospitals in Bangalore, South India, for the
first time. Most of the strains possessed type III or IIIA staphylococcal
cassette chromosome (
SCCmec) cassettes, and we did not detect
strains with type I, IA, or II cassettes. Most isolates also
contained the type III cassette chromosome recombinase (
ccr)
AB region. Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and staphylococcal
protein A (
spa) typing of a selected number of isolates have
been carried out. Although most isolates that were chosen for
MLST and
spa typing had the same patterns, they were quite diverse
in their pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) patterns. PFGE,
MLST, and
spa typing of the Indian strains revealed that they
are related to the previously described Hungarian and Brazilian
clones.

INTRODUCTION
Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is an important
pathogen causing pyogenic, disseminated, and toxin-mediated
infections (
7,
18,
20). MRSA bacteremia is associated with significantly
higher mortality than is known for methicillin-susceptible
S. aureus bacteremia (
6). Genotyping data from large international
studies have shown that a few clones of MRSA are responsible
for the spread of the disease in various parts of the world
(
4,
8,
18). Methicillin resistance among
S. aureus isolates
has reached phenomenal proportions in Indian hospitals, with
some cities reporting that up to 70% of the strains are resistant
to methicillin (
2). About 40 to 50% of
S. aureus strains isolated
from the burn and trauma wards in hospitals in and around Bangalore,
India, are resistant (
13). For the present study, clinical isolates
have been collected from two major hospitals in the city of
Bangalore. Many of these MRSA strains are multidrug resistant,
and they are characterized only phenotypically at present. The
discriminatory power of most of the phenotypic methods is restricted
and ambiguous (
10,
21). Molecular typing methods have in the
last few years paved the way for sophisticated techniques to
track the source and transmission route of bacterial pathogens
in hospital outbreaks and have also helped in establishing epidemiological
investigations comparing strains across continents (
1,
4,
23).
Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) has been shown to be
highly discriminatory in analyzing hospital outbreaks and tracking
genetic changes which occur in a relatively short time, while
multilocus sequence typing (MLST) is more suitable for studying
long-term genetic variations (
5,
8,
16,
24). The aim of this
study was to characterize the Indian isolates by PFGE, MLST,
and
spa typing techniques, which would aid in controlling hospital
outbreaks, epidemiological studies, and comparison with international
strains.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Hospitals.
St. John's Medical College (SJ) is a tertiary-care teaching
hospital. Manipal Hospital (M) is a multi-superspecialty tertiary-care
hospital with 650 beds. Both hospitals report about 40 to 50%
methicillin resistance among their
S. aureus isolates.
Samples.
Isolates were grown from culturing pus, urine, sputum, and blood, and a few were grown from culturing miscellaneous sites such as tracheal aspirates, at SJ and M. The isolates were inoculated into peptone water or semisolid nutrient agar deeps, sealed, and sent to us.
Bacterial strains.
Forty-five clinical isolates were obtained from SJ and 37 from M during the period of April 2003 to May 2004. S. aureus strains NCTC 8325, HUSA 304 (Hungarian), and HSJ 216 (Brazilian) were the kind gift of Herminia De Lencastre, Rockefeller University, New York, N.Y. Strain BB 255 was the kind gift of Brigitte Berger-Bächi, University of Zurich. DNA samples from S. aureus isolates possessing staphylococcal cassette chromosome (SCCmec) cassette types I, II, and III were the kind gift of T. Ito and K. Hiramatsu, Juntendo University, Tokyo, Japan.
Growth.
The strains were inoculated on brain heart infusion (BHI) agar (Himedia Laboratories, Mumbai, India) and grown for 24 h at 37°C. Typical staphylococcal colonies were examined under the microscope by Gram staining. A few strains which were contaminated were reinoculated on mannitol salt agar (Himedia) to inhibit the growth of nonstaphylococcal organisms, and colonies were picked and grown on BHI agar. Strains were characterized by catalase, coagulase, and DNase tests by established procedures for S. aureus (3).
Antibiotic susceptibility testing was performed by Kirby-Bauer disk diffusion according to the guidelines recommended by the NCCLS (17) on Mueller-Hinton agar plates at 37°C, using antibiotic disks containing penicillin, gentamicin, erythromycin, tetracycline, methicillin, and vancomycin (HiMedia). The MIC of oxacillin was determined by the broth dilution method in Mueller-Hinton broth after 24 h of incubation at 37°C in microtiter plates.
Preparation of chromosomal DNA.
Cells from an overnight culture in BHI broth collected by centrifugation were suspended in lysis buffer (phosphate-buffered saline containing 0.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate and 100 µg/ml proteinase K). The cell suspension was incubated at 37°C for 1 h, and an equal volume of phenol:chloroform (1:1) mixture was added to the cell suspension and vortexed. The samples were centrifuged, and the aqueous phase was transferred to a fresh tube. The DNA was precipitated by the addition of 30 µl of 3 M sodium acetate and 3 volumes of cold 99% ethanol. The DNA pellet was washed twice with cold 99% alcohol, air dried, and suspended in 500 µl of TE buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 1 mM EDTA [pH 8]).
Multiplex PCR.
The multiplex PCR was performed according to the procedure of Oliveira et al. (19). The presence of the mecA (gene coding for penicillin binding protein 2A) and femA (factor essential for methicillin resistance) genes was used as internal controls for detection of MRSA, and the genes were detected by PCR using the forward primer 5'-ACTGCTATCCACCCTCAAAC-3' and the reverse primer 5'-CTGGTGAAGTTGTAATCTGG-3' for mecA and the forward primer 5'-AAAAAAGCACATAACAAGCG-3' and the reverse primer 5'-GATAAAGAAGAAACCAGCAG-3' for femA in all the strains. The sizes of the amplified products for mecA and femA were 169 and 133 base pairs, respectively. The conditions for PCR were as described by Mehrotra et al. (15).
The remaining primers for detecting type I, II and III SCCmec cassettes; the conditions for PCR; and the sizes of the amplified products were as described by Oliviera et al. (19).
PCR for typing ccrAB.
PCR was performed for detection of the types of recombinase systems of the various strains with 5'-ATTGCCTTGATAATAGCCITC T-3' (forward) and 5'-AGCTCAAAAGCAAGCAATAGAAT-3' (reverse) as cassette chromosome recombinase (ccrAB) primers under the conditions described by Hanssen et al. (9).
MLST and spa typing.
MLST was performed as previously described by Enright et al. (8). Internal fragments of the seven housekeeping genes for carbamate kinase (arcC), shikimate dehydrogenase (aroE), glycerol kinase (glpF), guanylate kinase (gmK), phosphate acetyltransferase (pta), triosephosphate isomerase (tpi), and acetyl coenzyme A acetyltransferase (yqiL) were amplified by PCR with the specified primers, and the PCR products were purified (QiaQuick PCR purification kit; QIAGEN GmbH, Germany) and sequenced using an ABI Prism 377 DNA sequencer. Consensus sequences were assembled from both orientations. spa typing was performed according to the procedure of Shopsin et al. (22) using the forward primer 5'-GAACAACGTAACGGCTTCATCC-3' and reverse primer 5'-CAGCAGTAGTGCCGTTTG-3', and consensus sequences were assembled from both forward and reverse sequences (12, 22).
PFGE.
PFGE was done as previously described by McDougal et al. (14). Briefly, a bacterial pellet obtained from centrifuging 200 µl of an overnight-grown culture from a single colony was processed for lysostaphin treatment, and agarose plugs were prepared by mixing the culture with PFGE-grade agarose (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc., Richmond, California). The plugs were digested with EC lysis buffer for 4 h, washed with TE buffer, and then digested with SmaI restriction enzyme (Promega Corporation, Madison, Wis.) for 3 h. The restriction fragments were separated on a 1.5% gel (Bio-Rad PFGE agarose) with an initial switch time of 5 s and a final switch time of 35 s, a voltage of 6 V/cm, an included angle of 120°, and a running time of 21 h, using the CHEF-DRIII device (Bio-Rad). After electrophoresis, gels were stained using ethidium bromide, rinsed in water, and photographed under UV light with the GelDoc system (Bio-Rad).
Dendrogram.
The NCTC 8325 pattern on PFGE was used as a standard with assigned molecular weights according to Tenover et al. (25), and the dendrogram based on the similarities was derived from the unweighted pair group method using arithmetic averages (UPGMA) and Dice coefficients with Quantity One software (Bio-Rad).

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
All isolates from both hospitals were multidrug resistant and
were resistant to all the five antibiotics tested (penicillin
G, methicillin, erythromycin, gentamicin, and tetracycline),
but all were sensitive to vancomycin. The MIC of oxacillin varied
from 6 to >800 µg/ml for isolates from SJ and from
200 to >800 µg/ml for isolates from M. The MICs for
the majority of isolates from both hospitals fell into the range
of 200 to 400 µg/ml.
Table 1 depicts the origins of the isolates from both hospitals. Eighty percent of isolates from SJ were cultured from pus, while only 43% of isolates from M were from pus and 35% of isolates were from tracheal culture. A small percentage of cultures from both hospitals came from sputum, urine, blood, and drainage fluid.
SCCmec typing of all of the strains is presented in Table
2,
along with the PFGE patterns. All 82 isolates had
femA by PCR,
and 7 isolates gave no amplification with the
mecA primers used
in this study. In the multiplex PCR for determining the
SCCmec type, out of the total of 82 strains from SJ and M, 49 had
SCCmec type III (209-, 243-, 303-, and 414-bp PCR products present
in the multiplex PCR) and 26 had
SCCmec type IIIA (209-, 243-,
and 414-bp products present and 303-bp band absent). The only
difference between type III and IIIA is the absence of plasmid
pT181 from IIIA (absence of the 303-bp product) (
1). DNA from
P2300 generated only the 414- and 243-bp products; P3035, P2478,
and P3122 generated only the 303-bp product. These four strains
from SJ amplified partial cassettes and were nontypeable. Three
isolates from M did not amplify any of the primers that were
used. In all, there were seven strains which did not amplify
the
mecA primers, and these might have different
SCCmec cassettes.
As none of the isolates were typed as
SCCmec type I, IA, or
II, to reconfirm that the majority of the isolates were type
III or IIIA, a PCR was performed for detection of type III
ccrAB with ß
2 and
4 primers. All the isolates generated
a 1,600-bp product indicating the presence of type III
ccrAB,
except for the four
mecA-negative nontypeable strains from SJ,
which gave no amplification with the primers. These strains
will be further investigated, as only part of the type III
SCCmec cassette was amplified with the primers used in the multiplex
PCR. Ito et al. (
11) have suggested that the staphylococcal
cassette chromosome could exist independently of the antibiotic
resistance genes and may serve as a general genetic information
exchange system in staphylococci. The four
mecA-negative isolates
from SJ did not have the type III recombinase system, which
is unlike the findings of Hanssen et al. (
9), who reported the
existence of three types of
ccrAB genes in the absence of
mec genes in coagulase-negative staphylococci. Whether the nontypeable
strains have a truncated or a different recombinase system needs
to be studied.
The 82 isolates from SJ and M were grouped into three major
PFGE patterns, A, B, and C. The majority of samples from SJ
and M had PFGE patterns A1, A2, A3, B1, and C1. Patterns B2
to B11 had 14 isolates altogether from both hospitals, although
B6, B7, B8, B9, and B11 were present only in isolates from SJ,
represented by one strain per pattern. The largest diversity
was in PFGE pattern B subsets, followed by pattern C. There
were 21 isolates from SJ with patterns C1 to C8, of which 12
isolates belonged to type IIIA
SCCmec, and only 2 from M belonged
to type IIIA. Among the four nontypeable strains of SJ, two
belonged to pattern D, which was quite different from the three
other patterns, and one each of the nontypeable strains belonged
to patterns C2 and C8, respectively.
Recently, Aires de Sousa et al. (1) reported the recovery of predominantly type III and IIIA isolates from two hospitals in Taiwan and China which were related to the Hungarian and the Brazilian epidemic clones. PFGE was performed with Hungarian strain HUSA304 (SCCmec type III) and Brazilian strain HSJ216 (type IIIA; pT181 absent) along with samples from SJ and M, as shown in Fig. 1A and 2A. Figure 1A represents the PFGE patterns of SmaI macrorestriction fragments of selected strains from SJ and M, and Fig. 2A shows patterns with the Hungarian and the Brazilian clones along with some strains from SJ and M. Figure 1B reveals the relatedness between the SJ and M isolates, and Fig. 2B shows the relatedness of isolates from SJ and M to the Hungarian and the Brazilian clones. Patterns A1 and C1 of the clinical isolates differ from those of the Hungarian clone HUSA 304 and Brazilian clone HSJ 216 by two and three bands, respectively. Pattern A1 differs from B1 by only two bands. A1 and C1 are the predominant PFGE patterns among all the isolates. Aires de Sousa et al. have shown that the PFGE patterns of other Brazilian clones, i.e., HU 25, BRA 5, and BRA 101, have a high degree of similarity to those of HSJ 216. Similarly, the other Hungarian clones HU 101, HUSA 88, and HUSA 176 are closely related to HUSA 304 (1).
Selected strains from SJ and M were processed for MLST and
spa typing, and the data are presented in Table
3. Two isolates
each from SJ and M belonged to sequence type (ST) 239, and one
isolate from M was ST 241, which has
yqiL allele 30 and is a
single-locus variant of
yqiL 3 (MLST database). STs 239 and
241 have also been detected in Thailand (
7), as well as in China
and Taiwan (
1). As MLST involves analyzing 14 sequences for
each strain and is expensive,
spa typing was done for 30 isolates,
15 from SJ and 15 from M. Twenty-eight isolates had the same
spa type (WGKAOMQ) by the Kreisworth nomenclature (
12), and
two isolates, P2300 and P3400 from SJ, had different repeat
sequences (XKAOMQ and XKAQKAOMQ, respectively). The common sequence
KAOMQ is considered the signature
spa sequence for type III
and IIIA isolates. Strain P2300 also has the common sequence
KAOMQ, although it has only part of the type III cassette. The
MIC for this strain also is very low (0.78 µg/ml), and
further studies are under way. The MLST, ST, and
spa typing
results for the SJ and M strains are also in concordance with
similar patterns for the Hungarian and the Brazilian clones,
where ST 239 and
spa type WGKAOMQ predominate (
1).
Both MLST and
spa typing suggested a very limited divergence
between the isolates included in this study, but PFGE generated
a more diverse pattern. This may be explained by PFGE reflecting
chromosomal rearrangements that may be more common than mutations
changing the genes analyzed for MLST and
spa typing. It may
be an indication that these isolates have acquired the resistance
genes on different occasions, perhaps from a common reservoir
of commensal bacteria.
Indian S. aureus strains had not been genotyped until now, except for a report by Hanssen et al. (9), who performed PFGE for two Indian strains and reported that they belong to ccr type 3. Among the 82 strains from two hospitals in Bangalore that we have genotyped, 75 isolates were type III or IIIA. Although the majority of samples from SJ were isolated from pus, there was diversity in the PFGE patterns, and types III and IIIA were distributed equally. There was also a more varied range of MICs with SJ samples. Strains from M were cultured from a variety of sources, with pus and miscellaneous sources comprising 43% and 38%, respectively, and yet type III (84%) was the predominant SCCmec type among these isolates. SJ, being a teaching hospital, perhaps treats a more ethnically and socioeconomically diverse group of people, while M is a private hospital with a restricted clientale. However, PFGE, MLST, and spa typing data indicate that most of the strains obtained from these two hospitals are genetically related and are clonally similar to the Hungarian and the Brazilian epidemic strains. Although we have looked at a limited number of strains from two hospitals in Bangalore, it is clear that isolates related to the Brazilian and Hungarian epidemic clones have made their appearance in India. We are collecting MRSA isolates from various parts of India to genotype them and to follow the patterns and trends to help us in long-term epidemiological studies.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We acknowledge the help of Savita Nagaraj from St. John's Hospital
and H. B. Beena and Mary Rajammal from Manipal Hospital with
the collection of samples. We are grateful to G. Padmanaban
for critically reviewing the manuscript.
This work was supported mainly by funds from the Dorabji Tata Trust and partially with a planning grant from the Swedish Research Link program of the Swedish Agency for Research Cooperation with Developing Countries (SIDA/SAREC) and the Swedish Research Council.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Sir Dorabji Tata Centre for Research in Tropical Diseases, Society for Innovation and Development, IISc Campus, Malleswaram, Bangalore 560012, India. Phone: 91-80-23466007. Fax: 91-80-23466006. E-mail:
garakere{at}hotmail.com.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, July 2005, p. 3198-3202, Vol. 43, No. 7
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.7.3198-3202.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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