Objectives: Acinetobacter baumannii is a significant opportunistic pathogen causing nosocomial infections. Infections caused by A. baumannii are often difficult to treat because this bacterium is often multidrug-resistant and shows high environmental adaptability. Here, we report on the analysis of three A. baumannii strains isolated from hospital effluents in South Africa.
Methods: Strains were isolated on Leeds Acinetobacter agar and were identified using VITEK®2 platform. Antibiotic susceptibility testing was performed using the Kirby-Bauer Disk diffusion method. Whole-genome sequencing was performed. The assembled contigs were annotated. Multilocus sequence type, antimicrobial resistance, and virulence genes were identified.
Results: The strains showed two multilocus sequence types, ST231 (FA34) and ST1552 (PL448, FG116). Based on their antibiotic susceptibility profiles, PL448 and FG116 were classified as extensively drug-resistant and FA34 as pandrug-resistant. FA34 harbored mutations in LpxA, LpxC, and PmrB, conferring resistance to colistin, but not mcr genes. All three strains encoded virulence genes for immune evasion (capsule, lipopolysaccharide [LPS]), iron uptake, and biofilm formation. FA34 was related to human strains from South Africa; PL448 and FG116 were related to a strain isolated in the United States from a human wound.
Conclusions: The detection of extensively drug- and pandrug-resistant A. baumannii strains in hospital effluents is of particular concern. It indicates that wastewater might play a role in the spread of these bacteria. Our data provide insight into the molecular epidemiology, resistance, pathogenicity, and distribution of A. baumannii in South Africa.
Keywords: Acinetobacter baumannii; Carbapenemases; Colistin; Effluents; Pandrug-resistant; Sequence type-1552; Sequence type-231; Whole-genome sequencing.
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