International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene

Home Hygiene & Health

The Leading Source of Scientific, Professional & Consumer Information
International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene

Home Hygiene & Health

The Leading Source of Scientific, Professional & Consumer Information

Jan 22nd: Re-emergence of antibiotic susceptibility in a resistant lineage of MRSA

This really interesting study shows how antibiotic resistant strains of MRSA can regain antibiotic susceptibility

MRSA is a leading cause of hospital-associated infection. Acquired resistance is encoded by the mecA gene or its homologue mecC, but little is known about the evolutionary dynamics involved in gain and loss of resistance. The objective of this study was to obtain an understanding of Staphylococcus aureus methicillin resistance microevolution in vivo, by focusing on 231 isolates from a single epidemic of S. aureus that caused an epidemic in the UK.

Results show that resistance to methicillin in this single lineage was gained on at least two separate occasions, one of which led to a clonal expansion around 1995 presumably caused by a selective advantage. Resistance was, however, subsequently lost in vivo by nine strains isolated between 2008 and 2012. The authors describe the genetic mechanisms involved in this loss of resistance and the imperfect relationship between genotypic and phenotypic resistance.

The recent re-emergence of methicillin susceptibility in this epidemic lineage suggests a significant fitness cost of resistance and reduced selective advantage following the introduction in the mid-2000s of MRSA hospital control measures throughout the UK.

Ledda, A., Price, J. R., Cole, K., Llewelyn, M. J., Kearns, A. M., Crook, D. W., … Didelot, X. (2017). Re-emergence of methicillin susceptibility in a resistant lineage of Staphylococcus aureus. Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, 7, dkw570. http://doi.org/10.1093/jac/dkw570