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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2008, p. 700-706, Vol. 46, No. 2
0095-1137/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.01677-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Distribution of Conjugative-Plasmid-Mediated 16S rRNA Methylase Genes among Amikacin-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae Isolates Collected in 1995 to 1998 and 2001 to 2006 at a University Hospital in South Korea and Identification of Conjugative Plasmids Mediating Dissemination of 16S rRNA Methylase
Hee Young Kang,
Ki Young Kim,
Jungmin Kim,
Je Chul Lee,
Yoo Chul Lee,
Dong Taek Cho, and
Sung Yong Seol*
Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, Kyungpook National University, Daegu 700-422, South Korea
Received 23 August 2007/
Returned for modification 23 October 2007/
Accepted 13 December 2007

ABSTRACT
The distribution of conjugative-plasmid-mediated 16S rRNA methylase
genes among amikacin-resistant
Enterobacteriaceae collected
between 1995 and 1998 and between 2001 and 2006 at a university
hospital in South Korea was examined, and conjugative plasmids
carrying the 16S rRNA methylase genes were characterized by
PCR-based replicon typing and by determination of their antimicrobial
resistance pattern. Among the 7,127 isolates, 463 isolates showed
a high level of resistance to amikacin, and 218 of the 463 isolates
transferred amikacin resistance by conjugation. Among the 218
isolates,
armA was detected in 153 isolates (88
Klebsiella pneumoniae,
28
Escherichia coli, 19
Enterobacter cloacae, and 6
Serratia marcescens isolates and 12 isolates of other organisms), and
rmtB was detected in 51 isolates (32
K. pneumoniae isolates,
18
E. coli isolates, and 1
Citrobacter freundii isolate). The
first appearance of
armA was in 1997. The
armA gene was carried
by conjugative plasmids of replicon groups IncL/M, IncFIIAs,
IncF, IncA/C, IncHI2, and Inc(unidentified) in 38, 20, 7, 9,
4, and 75 strains, respectively. The
rmtB gene was carried by
conjugative plasmids of groups IncA/C, IncF, and IncI1-I

in
43 strains, 7 strains, and 1 strain, respectively. Transconjugants
that received the IncL/M plasmid carrying
armA or the IncA/C
plasmid carrying
rmtB showed an additional resistance to cefotaxime.
Transconjugants that received the IncFIIA plasmid or Inc(unidentified)
plasmid carrying the
armA gene showed an additional resistance
to cefoxitin and a high MIC
50 (0.25 mg/liter) of ciprofloxacin.
In conclusion, this study demonstrated that the dissemination
of 16S rRNA methylase genes among the
Enterobacteriaceae is
mediated by conjugative plasmids of various incompatibility
groups that confer resistance to multiple drugs, including aminoglycosides,
extended-spectrum β-lactams, and/or quinolones.

INTRODUCTION
Aminoglycosides have a high affinity for the 16S rRNA of the
bacterial 30S ribosome, and they block protein synthesis (
14,
20). Over the past few decades, there have been many studies
conducted regarding the mechanisms of resistance to aminoglycosides.
One of the most common mechanisms of resistance to aminoglycosides
is the production of aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes, such
as 1-
N-aminoglycoside acetyltransferase (AAC), adenyltransferase,
and phosphotransferase (
14,
20). Amikacin was developed to suppress
a variety of aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes from their accessing
target sites (
12), and therefore rare, amikacin-resistant bacteria
could be expected. Recently, a series of special methylases
that protect microbial 16S rRNA, however, were identified in
several nosocomial pathogens, and these enzymes are capable
of conferring extraordinarily high levels of resistance (MIC
> 512 mg/liter) to most clinically important aminoglycosides,
including amikacin, isepamicin, arbekacin, kanamycin, tobramycin,
and gentamicin (
5-
8,
21-
24). Since the first identification
of a gene encoding 16S rRNA methylase,
rmtA, from a
Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolate in 2003 (
20), four major 16S rRNA methylases,
rmtA (
24),
armA (
6),
rmtB (
5), and
rmtC (
21), have been reported
to occur in several nosocomial pathogens, including
P. aeruginosa,
Serratia marcescens,
Klebsiella pneumoniae,
Acinetobacter baumannii,
and
Proteus mirabilis (
5,
6,
13,
21,
24). The genes for 16S
rRNA methylases are mediated by mobile genetic elements that
are carried by transferable large plasmids (
5,
7-
8); thus, the
spread of these genes among gram-negative bacilli has been concerning.
Recently, several studies have demonstrated the dissemination
of the
armA gene to various species of
Enterobacteriaceae in
European countries (
7), the spread of the multidrug-resistant
Escherichia coli and
K. pneumoniae isolates that produce both
extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs) and 16S rRNA methylases
in Taiwan (
23), the dissemination of 16S rRNA methylase-mediated
amikacin-resistant isolates of
K. pneumoniae and
A. baumannii in South Korea (
13), and the emergence of 16S rRNA methylases
in Belgium (
2).
In this study, we tried to determine the beginning of the emergence and the current prevalence of plasmid-mediated 16S rRNA methylases among the Enterobacteriaceae. This was done by detecting the 16S rRNA methylase genes in amikacin-resistant Enterobacteriaceae isolates that were collected in 1995 to 1998 and 2001 to 2006 at a university hospital in South Korea. In addition, in order to understand how the genes were disseminated, conjugative plasmids carrying the 16S rRNA methylase genes were identified by PCR-based replicon typing of the major plasmid incompatibility (Inc) groups among the Enterobacteriaceae.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains.
A total of 7,217 nonduplicate
Enterobacteriaceae isolates were
collected in 1995 to 1998 and 2001 to 2006 from patients hospitalized
at Kyungpook National University (KNU) Hospital in South Korea.
Bacterial species were identified by using the Vitek GNI system
(bioMerieux, Marcy L'Etoile, France) or the API 20E kit (bioMerieux,
Marcy L'Etoile, France). All isolates were tested for resistance
to amikacin using the agar dilution method (
4).
Transfer of the amikacin resistance determinant by conjugation.
In order to test the transferability of the amikacin resistance determinant to the rifampin-resistant E. coli strain RG 488 and the azide-resistant strain J53, all amikacin-resistant isolates were included as putative donors in a conjugation assay using the broth mating method. The transconjugants were selected on a Muller-Hinton agar plate supplemented with amikacin (64 µg/ml) and rifampin (50 µg/ml) or sodium azide (200 µg/ml).
Detection of 16S rRNA methylase genes and aacA4.
A PCR method was used to detect the genes encoding 16S rRNA methylases (rmtA, rmtB, and armA) and the gene encoding AAC(6')-Ib (aacA4), which are known to confer resistance to amikacin. The primers used were those described by Yan et al. (23) for rmtA, rmtB, and armA and by Shi et al. (18) for aacA4. PCRs were performed as described previously (18, 23).
PCR-based replicon typing.
All transconjugants obtained from a conjugation assay were subjected to typing by a PCR method, based on replicons of the major plasmid incompatibility groups among Enterobacteriaceae, that was developed by Carattoli et al. (3). The plasmid DNAs from the transconjugants were isolated by an alkaline lysis method (1) and amplified by five multiplex and three simplex PCRs using 18 pairs of primers that recognized Inc replicons FIA, FIB, FIC, HI1, HI2, I1-I
, L/M, N, P, W, T, A/C, K, B/O, X, Y, F, and FIIA. As positive controls in the PCRs, R27 (HI1), R478 (HI2), R483 (I1), R446b (L/M), RN3 (N), Tp181 (FIme), RS-a (W), RP4(P), R40a (A/C), Rts1 (T), R124 (FIV), R387 (K), R16 (B/O), and R6K (X) were used.
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing.
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing and the determination of MICs were performed by the agar dilution method (4). The antimicrobial agents included the following: gentamicin and kanamycin (Duchefa, Haarlem, The Netherlands), amikacin and trimethoprim (ICN Biomedicals, Irvine, CA), streptomycin (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO), ampicillin (USB, Cleveland, OH), cefoxitin (Sigma), cefotaxime (Sigma), cefepime (Boryung Inc., Seoul, South Korea), aztreonam (Sigma), ceftazidime (Sigma), ciprofloxacin (Fluka, Buchs, Switzerland), chloramphenicol (Sigma), tetracycline (Sigma), and sulfamethoxazole (Sigma). Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 and Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 27853 were used as quality control strains.

RESULTS
Among the 7,217 clinical isolates of
Enterobacteriaceae that
were collected from the KNU Hospital in South Korea in 1995
to 1998 and 2001 to 2006, 463 (6.5%) strains showed resistance
to amikacin (Table
1). The rate of resistance to amikacin increased
from 2.7% in 1995 to 8.4% in 2006. Overall, 269 (13.1%) of the
2,059
Klebsiella pneumoniae, 100 (3.0%) of the 3,326
Escherichia coli, 42 (8.7%) of the 484
Enterobacter cloacae, and 23 (7.5%)
of the 307
Serratia marcescens isolates were resistant to amikacin.
The rates of resistance to amikacin in
Citrobacter freundii,
Morganella morganii, and
Proteus mirabilis were 5.0% (8/161
isolates), 3.2% (2/76 isolates), and 2.1% (3/140 isolates),
respectively.
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TABLE 1. Numbers of isolates studied and rates of resistance to amikacin among Enterobacteriaceae that were collected from a university hospital in South Korea between 1995 and 2006
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By a conjugation experiment, amikacin resistance could be transferred
to 218 (47.1%) of the 463 amikacin-resistant isolates. All 218
strains and their transconjugants were examined for the presence
of the genes that encode 16S rRNA methylases (
armA,
rmtA, and
rmtB) and the gene that encodes AAC(6')-Ib (
aacA4). Among the
218 strains,
armA,
rmtB, and
aacA4 were detected in 153 (33.1%),
51 (11.0%), and 69 (31.7%) isolates, respectively, but
rmtA was not detected in any of the isolates (Tables
2 and
3).
aacA4 was detected with
armA (50 strains) or
rmtB (6 strains), and
it was transferred simultaneously with
armA (37 strains) to
the recipient
E. coli strain, but not with
rmtB. The first appearances
of
armA and
rmtB were in 1997 and 2001, respectively (Table
2). Whereas the
armA gene was detected among various species
of
Enterobacteriaceae,
rmtB was detected only in
E. coli, in
K. pneumoniae, and in one
Citrobacter freundii isolate (Table
3).
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TABLE 2. Distribution of aacA4 and 16S rRNA methylase genes among the 218 amikacin-resistant isolates of Enterobacteriaceae that were collected from a university hospital in South Korea
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TABLE 3. Distribution of aacA4 and 16S rRNA methylase genes among the 218 amikacin-resistant isolates of Enterobacteriaceae collected from a university hospital in South Korea between 1995 and 2006
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In order to identify the conjugative plasmids carrying
armA or
rmtB, PCR-based replicon typing was performed using 18 pairs
of primers that recognized the Inc replicons FIA, FIB, FIC,
HI1, HI2, I1-I

, L/M, N, P, W, T, A/C, K, B/O, X, Y, F, and FIIA
(Table
4). IncL/M, IncFIIAs, and IncHI2 were detected in 37
(24.2%), 20 (13.1%), and 4 (2.6%) of the 153 transconjugants
that carry
armA, respectively, but not in the transconjugants
that carry
rmtB. IncA/C was detected in 41 (80.3%) of the 51
transconjugants that carry
rmtB and in 7 (4.6%) of the 153 transconjugants
that carry
armA. IncF was detected in 6 (11.7%) of the 51 transconjugants
that carry
rmtB and in 7 (4.6%) of the 153 transconjugants that
carry
armA. IncFIB and IncB/O were detected only in the transconjugants
that carry
aacA4 alone. In 75 (49.0%) of the 153 transconjugants
that carry
armA, none of the 18 replicons were detected. Replicons
such as N, P, W, T, K, and X were not detected in any of the
strains that carry
armA,
rmtB, or
aacA4.
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TABLE 4. Incompatibility groups of conjugative plasmids which confer a high level of resistance to amikacin due to the presence of the 16S rRNA methylase gene and/or aacA4 gene
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MICs of various kinds of antimicrobial agents for the transconjugants
that received plasmids carrying
armA or
rmtB were determined.
All transconjugants showed high levels of resistance (MICs,
>256 µg/ml) to amikacin, kanamycin, and gentamicin.
MIC
50s of 12 kinds of antimicrobial agents other than aminoglycosides
were calculated among the strains that were grouped with regard
to the replicon types of plasmid incompatibility groups and
the presence of
armA or
rmtB (Table
5). Groups with fewer than
five strains were excluded from the calculation of MIC
50s. Surprisingly,
a very distinctive antimicrobial resistance pattern was revealed
in each group. Compared to other groups, transconjugants that
received the IncL/M plasmid carrying
armA and the IncA/C plasmid
carrying
rmtB showed higher MIC
50 values for cefotaxime (64
µg/ml) and cefepime (8 µg/ml). In the transconjugants
that received the Inc(unidentified) plasmid carrying
armA, higher
MIC
50 values of aztreonam (32 µg/ml), ceftazidime (32
µg/ml), cefoxitin (32 µg/ml), and ciprofloxacin
(0.25 µg/ml) were revealed. Transconjugants that received
the IncFIIAs plasmid carrying
armA showed higher MIC
50 values
of cefoxitin (32 µg/ml) and ciprofloxacin (0.25 µg/ml).
Transconjugants that received the IncA/C plasmid carrying
rmtB showed additional resistance to multiple antimicrobial agents,
including ampicillin, cefotaxime, chloramphenicol, streptomycin,
sulfamethoxazole, trimethoprim, and tetracycline.
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TABLE 5. Antimicrobial susceptibilities of transconjugants grouped by presence of the armA or rmtB gene and by plasmid incompatibility groupa
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The year of isolation and the species of the
Enterobacteriaceae isolates that were able to transfer
armA or
rmtB to the recipient
E. coli isolate are shown in Table
6. Whereas 9 of the 13 strains
that were isolated from 1997 and 1998 were
Enterobacteriaceae,
including 5
Enterobacter cloacae strains, 2
Citrobacter freundii strains, 1
Klebsiella oxytoca strain, and 1
Enterobacter agglomerans strain, 162 of the 191 strains that were isolated after 2001
were
E. coli and
K. pneumoniae. The major conjugative plasmids
carrying
armA were IncA/C and IncHI2 plasmids until 1998, but
after 2001, they were replaced by the conjugative plasmids of
incompatibility groups IncFIIAs, IncL/M, and Inc(unidentified).
Between 2003 and 2004, a rapid increase in the number of IncL/M
and Inc(unidentified) conjugative plasmids carrying
armA among
the
Enterobacteriaceae, especially in
K. pneumoniae, was revealed.
Among the
K. pneumoniae isolates, the
armA-carrying conjugative
plasmids of groups Inc(unidentified), IncL/M, IncFIIAs, IncF,
and IncA/C were detected in 55, 17, 11, 3, and 2 isolates, respectively.
Among the
E. coli isolates, the
armA-carrying conjugative plasmids
of groups IncL/M, Inc(unidentified), IncFIIAs, IncF, and IncA/C
were detected in 10 isolates, 9 isolates, 3 isolates, 2 isolates,
and 1 isolate, respectively. Among the
E. cloacae isolates,
the
armA-carrying conjugative plasmids of groups IncFIIAs, Inc(unidentified),
IncHI2, IncL/M, and IncF were detected in six, six, three, two,
and two isolates, respectively. The IncL/M conjugative plasmid
carrying
armA was detected in six of six
S. marcescens isolates,
and the IncA/C conjugative plasmid carrying
armA was detected
in three of the four
C. freundii isolates. The IncA/C conjugative
plasmid carrying
rmtB was detected in 31
K. pneumoniae isolates,
11
E. coli isolates, and 1
C. freundii isolate. The IncF conjugative
plasmid carrying
rmtB was detected in six
E. coli isolates and
one
K. pneumoniae isolate. The IncI1-I

conjugative plasmid carrying
rmtB was detected in one
E. coli isolate.
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TABLE 6. Years of isolation and species of Enterobacteriaceae isolates which were able to transfer the plasmids of various incompatibility groups carrying armA or rmtB
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DISCUSSION
We have studied the distribution of conjugative-plasmid-mediated
16S rRNA methylase genes, such as
armA,
rmtA, and
rmtB, among
the amikacin-resistant
Enterobacteriaceae that were collected
in 1995 to 1998 and 2001 to 2006 at KNU Hospital in South Korea.
In addition, the conjugative plasmids that are responsible for
disseminating the 16S rRNA methylase genes were identified by
replicon typing of plasmid incompatibility groups. The results
indicate that the widespread presence of
armA and
rmtB among
amikacin-resistant
Enterobacteriaceae has been mediated by conjugative
plasmids of various incompatibility groups conferring additional
resistance to other kinds of antimicrobial agents, including
ESBLs and quinolones.
The armA gene was initially sequenced from a C. freundii strain that was isolated in Poland (GenBank accession no. AF550415) and later characterized from a K. pneumoniae strain that was isolated in 2000 from a patient in France (6). The rmtB gene was first identified in S. marcescens S-95 isolated in 2002 from a patient in Japan (5). In the current study, the armA gene was first detected among three E. coli strains, three E. cloacae strains, one C. freundii strain, and one K. oxytoca strain that were isolated in 1997. The year of the first appearance of rmtB could not be correctly determined due to the exclusion of isolates distributed in 1999 and 2000; however, the emergence of rmtB as early as 2001 was assumed because rmtB was detected in seven strains that were isolated in 2001. Thus, this study has demonstrated that armA and rmtB emerged earlier than what has been reported so far.
The overall prevalence rates of armA and rmtB among the Enterobacteriaceae at KNU Hospital were 2.1% (153/7,127 isolates) and 0.7% (51/7,127 isolates), respectively. The overall prevalence rates of armA were 4.3% (88/2,059 isolates) for K. pneumoniae, 3.9% (19/484) for E. cloacae, 2.0% (6/307) for S. marcescens, 2.0% (3/161) for C. freundii, and 0.8% (28/3,326) for E. coli, thus indicating that armA is widespread among the various species of Enterobacteriaceae. The overall prevalence rates of rmtB were 1.6% (32/2,059 isolates) for K. pneumoniae and 0.5% (18/3,326) for E. coli, indicating the limited spread of rmtB among the Enterobacteriaceae compared to the spread of armA. The prevalence rates of armA and rmtB among K. pneumoniae and E. coli were much higher than those reported in a previous study performed in Taiwan (23), in which the prevalence rates were 0.9% (15/1,624 isolates) and 0.3% (5/1,624) for K. pneumoniae and 0.4% (10/2,559) and 0.04% (1/2,559) for E. coli, respectively.
The dissemination mechanisms of the genes that encode 16S rRNA methylases are of clinical significance since the genes confer a high level of resistance to all clinically available aminoglycosides, except streptomycin, and they were often linked to other resistance determinants, such as blaTEM-1, blaCTX-M-3, blaCTX-M-14, sul1, and dfrXII (2, 7). From studies of the genetic environments of armA and rmtB, the armA gene was part of functional composite transposon Tn1548 in plasmid pIP1204 (7) and the rmtB gene was found in the flanking region of the Tn3-like structure (5), suggesting that the spread of armA and rmtB was by transposition. Another mechanism, the dissemination of armA and rmtB by conjugative plasmids, has been demonstrated in a few studies: armA by a broad-host-range IncL/M conjugative plasmid (2, 5, 7, 23) and by a self-transferable IncN plasmid in an E. coli pig isolate from Spain (9) and rmtB by an IncF1 plasmid (2). The present study, however, demonstrated that conjugative plasmids that belonged to a variety of incompatibility groups were involved in the dissemination of armA and rmtB among Enterobacteriaceae. armA was carried by IncA/C and IncHI2 conjugative plasmids until 1998 but, after 2001, carried by plasmids of groups Inc(unidentified), IncL/M, IncFIIAs, and IncF. rmtB was carried by IncA/C, IncF, and IncI1-I
plasmids. In addition, the major plasmids that were responsible for the dissemination of armA and rmtB were completely different in terms of the incompatibility groups of the plasmids. The incompatibility groups of major conjugative plasmids that were involved in the dissemination of armA were Inc(unidentified) (75/153 isolates [49.0%]), IncL/M (37/153 isolates [24.2%]), and IncFIIAs (20/153 isolates [13.1%]), whereas the major conjugative plasmids that were involved in the dissemination of rmtB were IncA/C (41/51 isolates [80.3%]) and IncF (6/51 isolates [11.7%]). This finding suggests that the dissemination of armA and rmtB among Enterobacteriaceae isolates has been independently carried out by conjugative plasmids of different incompatibility groups. This suggestion could be supported with another finding, namely, that armA was detected among various species of Enterobacteriaceae but that rmtB was detected only in E. coli and K. pneumoniae, as well as in one C. freundii isolate. Interestingly, the aacA4 gene, which was the main amikacin resistance determinant before the emergence of armA and rmtB, was identified along with armA or rmtB and transferred simultaneously with armA but not rmtB. An IncL/M plasmid was detected in most of the transconjugants that carried both aacA4 and armA, suggesting the colocalization of aacA4 and armA on a broad-host-range IncL/M conjugative plasmid. Localization of aacA4 on an IncL/M plasmid that was carried by gentamicin- and amikacin-resistant Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium isolates has been reported in a previous study (19), and the localization of armA on an IncL/M plasmid has been reported repeatedly (2, 5, 7, 23). However, the colocalization of aacA4 and armA on an IncL/M plasmid has never before been demonstrated.
It is very interesting to note that a distinctive antimicrobial resistance pattern is revealed in each group whose transconjugants were grouped by the presence of armA or rmtB and by a plasmid incompatibility group, suggesting the linkage of armA and rmtB to other plasmid-located antimicrobial resistance genes and the association of these genes with specific plasmid backbones. The armA-carrying IncL/M plasmid and the rmtB-carrying IncA/C plasmid were associated with resistance to cefotaxime but not to ceftazidime, strongly suggesting the presence of blaCTX-M. These results were in agreement with those of a previous study in which the association of armA with blaCTX-M-3 on the IncL/M plasmid was demonstrated (7). The association of rmtB with blaCTX-M-14 was also demonstrated in a previous study (2), but the conjugative plasmid that carried these genes was the IncF plasmid. Besides being associated with resistance to cefotaxime, the rmtB-carrying IncA/C plasmids were associated with additional resistance to multiple drugs, including chloramphenicol, streptomycin, sulfamethoxazole, trimethoprim, and tetracycline, suggesting the presence of an integron. The armA-carrying Inc(unidentified) and the IncFIIAs plasmids were associated with resistance to cefoxitin, suggesting the presence of plasmid-mediated AmpC-type β-lactamase (pACBL). A similar association between armA and pACBL, such as with CMY-2 or DHA-1, was reported in a previous study (13). The armA-carrying IncFIIAs and Inc(unidentified) plasmids and rmtB-carrying IncF plasmid were associated with a relatively high MIC50 of ciprofloxacin (0.25 mg/liter), suggesting the presence of the plasmid-mediated quinolone resistance determinant qnr. Although the association between qnr determinants and ESBL or pACBL has been demonstrated in previous reports (10, 15-17), the connection of qnr determinants with armA or rmtB has not yet been determined. In fact, transconjugants that received an Inc(unidentified) plasmid carrying armA showed additional resistance to oxyimino-cephalosporins, such as aztreonam and ceftazidime, suggesting the production of ESBL. Therefore, the association of armA, pACBL, qnr, and ESBL on the conjugative Inc(unidentified) plasmid is suggested, and a high rate of such a conjugative plasmid among Enterobacteriaceae isolated after 2004 threatened the spread of multidrug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, which are resistant to almost all clinically important antimicrobial agents, such as aminoglycosides, ESBLs, and quinolones. In order to confirm the hypotheses put forth in this paper, the identification of antimicrobial resistance determinants and integrons that are associated with armA or rmtB on specific plasmid backbones should be conducted.
Notably, there was an increase in the proportion of amikacin-resistant isolates to total isolates in 2005 and 2006. It appears that most of the increase was due to an increase in the proportion of amikacin-resistant K. pneumoniae isolates to total K. pneumoniae isolates in 2005 and 2006 (around 18 to 20% of total isolates in 2005 and 2006 versus about 11% of total isolates in 2004 and about 6% of total isolates in 2003). Indeed, among the 139 Enterobacteriaceae isolates carrying armA or rmtB in 2005 and 2006, 98 (70.5%) isolates were K. pneumoniae and, surprisingly, 94 (95.9%) of the 98 K. pneumoniae isolates carried one of the following plasmids: armA-carrying Inc(unidentified), IncL/M, and IncFIIAs plasmids and an rmtB-carrying IncA/C plasmid, all of which were assumed to carry additional ESBLs and/or pACBLs. Therefore, an increase in the rate of resistance to amikacin in K. pneumoniae isolates in 2005 and 2006 seemed to result from the dissemination of armA and rmtB, which was mediated by the four kinds of conjugative plasmids that were assumed to carry additional ESBLs and/or pACBLs. Because ESBLs and pACBLs are prevalent among K. pneumoniae isolates in South Korea (11, 15), the association of armA and rmtB with ESBLs and/or pACBLs on conjugative plasmids might have contributed to the increase in the presence of armA and rmtB among K. pneumoniae strains in recent years.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by a grant from the South Korean Health
21 R&D Project, Ministry of Health and Welfare, South Korea
(03-PJ1-PG1-CH03-0002), and in part by the Brain Korea 21 Project
(2006).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, Kyungpook National University, 101 Dongin-2Ga, Junggu, Daegu 700-422, South Korea. Phone: 82-53-420-4842. Fax: 82-53-427-5664. E-mail:
syseol{at}knu.ac.kr 
Published ahead of print on 19 December 2007. 
Hee Young Kang, Ki Young Kim, and Jungmin Kim contributed equally to this work. 

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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2008, p. 700-706, Vol. 46, No. 2
0095-1137/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.01677-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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