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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, May 2005, p. 2380-2383, Vol. 43, No. 5
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.5.2380-2383.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Genetic Background Affects Stability of mecA in Staphylococcus aureus
Yuki Katayama,1
D. Ashley Robinson,2
Mark C. Enright,2 and
Henry F. Chambers3*
Department of Bacteriology, Faculty of Medicine, Juntendo University, Tokyo, Japan,1
Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of Bath, Bath, United Kingdom,2
Division of Infectious Diseases, San Francisco General Hospital, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California3
Received 30 August 2004/
Returned for modification 2 September 2004/
Accepted 28 December 2004

ABSTRACT
The staphylococcal methicillin resistance determinant,
mecA,
resides on a mobile genetic element, staphylococcus chromosomal
cassette
mec (SCC
mec). The distribution of SCC
mec in nature
is limited to relatively few clonal complexes of related methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). We have previously reported that
some genetic backgrounds are restrictive of
mecA and penicillin-binding
protein 2a expression, which could account for the restricted
clonal distribution of SCC
mec in nature. In this study, we investigate
the potential role of the host chromosome in the transformability
and expression of
mecA in 103 naturally occurring methicillin-susceptible
S. aureus clinical isolates. The isolates, which had been genotyped
previously by multilocus sequence typing, were classified into
one of two mutually exclusive categories based on whether the
isolates belonged to "major" MRSA lineages or to "other" lineages
that are never or occasionally MRSA. We introduced
mecA expressed
on the low-copy-number plasmid pYK20 into each MSSA strain and
assayed the phenotype of resistance to nafcillin by population
analysis to assess the relationship between the stability of
mecA expression and genetic background. Strains from the major
MRSA lineages were more transformable with pYK20 and better
able to maintain the plasmid and express resistance in comparison
to strains from other lineages. These data support the hypothesis
that the presence of
mecA within relatively few clonal complexes
is partly due to genetic factors that are permissive of
mecA and its gene product.

INTRODUCTION
Staphylococcus aureus is a frequent and important human pathogen
both in the community and in hospitals (
12). Until recently,
community strains have been reliably susceptible to most antibiotics,
but the prevalence of methicillin-resistant
S. aureus (MRSA)
is increasing. Methicillin resistance (that is, ß-lactam-antibiotic-class
resistance) is mediated by PBP2a, a bacterial cell wall synthetic
penicillin-binding protein (PBP) with low-affinity binding to
ß-lactam antibiotics (
6,
17). PBP2a is encoded by
mecA, which is located on a mobile element, staphylococcal chromosomal
cassette
mec (SCC
mec), which is horizontally transferable among
staphylococcal species (
8-
10). Four types of SCC
mec elements
have been characterized. Types I, II, and III (34 to 66 kb)
are principally found among hospital-associated MRSA (HA-MRSA)
strains. SCC
mec type IV (20 to 24 kb) was first identified in
a community-associated MRSA (CA-MRSA) strain (
13), and it is
by far the predominant type found among community isolates.
In contrast to HA-MRSA, CA-MRSA tends to be susceptible to most
non-ß-lactam antimicrobials.
Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) is a discriminatory genotyping technique used to characterize isolates of S. aureus based on sequence variation at seven housekeeping genes (3-5). The sequence variation is used to define sequence type (STs) that can be further organized into clonal complexes (CCs) of related STs. The majority of HA-MRSA isolates are members of five CCs or lineages: CC5, CC8, CC22, CC30, and CC45 (4). Additionally, CC1 represents a lineage strongly associated with emerging CA-MRSA infections (13). Of 468 MRSA isolates recorded in the MLST database (www.mlst.net) as of March 2004, 420 belong to CC1, CC5, CC8, CC22, CC30, or CC45. A number of "other" lineages can be found among the S. aureus species that are never or occasionally MRSA or infrequently isolated in general (4, 5, 14). Given the apparent mobility of SCCmec, its limited distribution among the possible S. aureus genotypes found in nature is striking.
Genetic background profoundly influences the methicillin resistance phenotype. Chromosomal genes located outside of SCCmec, for example, determine whether a strain is homogeneous (defined as 1% or more of cells expressing high-level resistance [16]) or heterogeneous (one cell in 106 expressing high-level resistance) in its pattern of resistance. Methicillin-susceptible variants of MRSA strains from which SCCmec was excised (11) were permissive of the introduction of unregulated mecA expressed on a low-copy-number plasmid, pYK20, whereas naïve strains (i.e., those in which mecA was not previously resident on the host chromosome) were restrictive and selected against mecA expression. This barrier to mecA could be overcome by providing ß-lactamase regulatory genes blaR1-blaI (1) or homologous regulatory genes mecR1-mecI (7), which presumably act as compensatory elements that control mecA expression and permit the maintenance and expression of plasmid-expressed mecA. We hypothesized that this instability of mecA in some genetic backgrounds could play a role in the relatively restricted clonal distribution of MRSA in nature. In this study, we introduced the pYK20 plasmid expressing unregulated mecA into 103 methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MSSA) clinical isolates representing a variety of different genetic backgrounds to determine whether there was an association between specific genetic backgrounds, i.e., sequence types or clonal complexes and permissive or restrictive behavior with respect to the presence of mecA.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains and culture condition.
One hundred three MSSA strains that we tested represented all
of the tetracycline-sensitive MSSA strains from among 220 strains
selected to span the global diversity of the species as described
previously (
14). Tetracycline-sensitive strains were required
in order to avoid direct selection of
mecA, which was introduced
into recipient strains on a plasmid that encoded tetracycline
resistance as the selectable marker. These strains were classified
on the basis of ST and/or CC into one of two categories: (i)
"major" MRSA lineages, defined as the most common and predominant
MRSA lineages from both hospital and community sources and comprising
CC1, CC5, CC8, CC22, CC30, and CC45; and (ii) "other" MRSA lineages,
defined as those never or occasionally MRSA or infrequently
isolated in general. Seventy-seven (75%) of the 103 strains
produced ß-lactamase. To eliminate the possibility
that ß-lactamase regulatory genes were compensating
for the presence of
mecA in an otherwise restrictive background,
ß-lactamase-negative variants were isolated from 33
of the 77 strains by curing the ß-lactamase plasmid
by subculture at 43°C.
The control strain, COLnex, is a tetracycline-susceptible, methicillin-susceptible variant of the ß-lactamase-negative homogeneous methicillin-resistant strain COL, from which SCCmec has been eliminated (11).
All S. aureus strains and transformants were grown overnight at 37°C in trypticase soy broth or on trypticase soy agar (Difco Laboratories, Detroit, MI) with aeration, unless indicated otherwise. Tetracycline (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) was used at the concentration of 10 µg/ml. Nafcillin (Sigma) was used for population analysis to determine the methicillin resistance phenotype.
Detection of ß-lactamase and blaZ.
ß-Lactamase was detected by use of a nitrocefin disk (Becton, Dickinson and Company, Sparks, MD) after induction with 2-(2'-carboxyphenyl)benzoyl-6-aminopenicillanic acid (CBAP). The blaZ gene was detected by PCR amplification of DNA extracted from whole-cell lysates with primers 5'-AGTGCATGTAATTCAAACAGTTCA-3' (205 nt to 182 nt in the blaZ gene [GenBank accession no. X04121]) and 5'-GTCTTACCGAAAGCAGC-3' (50 nt to 71 nt in the blaZ gene). PCR was carried out with a Taq polymerase kit (QIAGEN) as follows: 3 min at 94°C, 30 cycles of 30 s at 94°C, 1 min at 57°C, and 90 s at 72°C, followed finally by 6 min at 70°C.
Plasmid and DNA manipulation.
The construction of plasmid pYK20 carrying mecA was done as described previously (11). Briefly, pYK20 was isolated from E. coli DH5
using standard procedures. It consists of constitutively expressed mecA cloned into a tetracycline-selectable S. aureus-E. coli shuttle vector, pAW8 (18). The 2.8-kb mecA insert was obtained by PCR amplification of COL mecA, its promoter, the first 223 nt of mecR1, plus a 249-nt stretch downstream of the stop codon, which includes a strong transcriptional terminator. MSSA strains were transformed by electroporation with pYK20 isolated from a COLnex transformant. MSSA transformants were selected by growth on tetracycline-containing agar. DNA manipulations were performed by standard methodologies (10, 19).
COLnex assay for defective mecA expression.
Mutations interfering with the expression of mecA in pYK20 transformants of MSSA strains were assayed using a reporter assay with COLnex, as previously described (11). Briefly, a representative colony of a transformant yielding the predicted 2.8-kb PCR mecA amplification product was regrown in broth containing 10 µg/ml of tetracycline. The pYK20 plasmid was extracted, purified, and introduced into the COLnex host strain by electroporation. After a 48-h incubation, COLnex (pYK20) transformants were selected on tetracycline-containing agar and replicated on trypticase soy agar containing tetracycline at a concentration of 10 µg/ml and nafcillin at concentrations of 0, 2.5, 10, or 100 µg/ml. After a 24-h incubation, CFU growing at each nafcillin concentration were counted and the proportion calculated relative to CFU growing on nafcillin-free agar. Plasmid-expressed mecA on pYK20 reproduces the homogeneous COL phenotype, which is 100% growth of CFU at 100 µg/ml of nafcillin. Mutations interfering with mecA expression of a functional gene product are detected by a heterogeneous phenotype or as susceptibility.
Population analysis.
Population analysis employed the agar plate method (15), in which approximately 108 CFU are quantitatively inoculated onto agar containing nafcillin concentrations of 0, 2.5, 10, or 100 µg/ml. Cultures were incubated for 48 to 72 h at 37°C, and colonies were counted at each concentration. Resistance phenotypes were scored based on the classification proposed by Tomasz et al. (16). Homogeneous resistance was defined as growth of
1 CFU in 102 growing on agar containing 100 µg/ml of nafcillin; class 3 heterogeneous resistance was defined as 1 CFU in 102 to 104 at 100 µg/ml of nafcillin; class 2 heterogeneous resistance was defined as 1 CFU in 105 to 106 at 100 µg/ml of nafcillin; and class 1 heterogeneous resistance was defined as
103 CFU of 108 growing at 2.5 or 10 µg/ml and no growth at 100 µg/ml of nafcillin.
Statistical analysis.
2 x 2 contingency tables were evaluated with Fisher's exact test.

RESULTS
Detection of ß-lactamase plasmid.
The 103 MSSA strains and their classification into "major" MRSA
lineages and "other" lineages by MLST are listed in Tables
1 and
2 (
5). Seventy-seven percent (41/53) of the strains from
major MRSA lineages produced ß-lactamase; 72% (36/50)
of the strains from other lineages produced ß-lactamase.
Efficiency of plasmid transformation into each MSSA strain.
Of the 103 potential recipient strains for pYK20 transformation,
26 were naturally ß-lactamase negative, 33 were successfully
cured of ß-lactamase, and 44 ß-lactamase-producing
strains could not be cured using our procedures. Eighty-two
percent (84/103) of all strains were successfully transformed
with pYK20 (Tables
3 and
4). Transformants were obtained with
86% (51/59) of the ß-lactamase-negative strains and
with 80% (35/44) of the ß-lactamase-producing strains.
ß-Lactamase production therefore had no association
with the transformability of the strains (
P = 0.199). Ninety-six
percent (51/53) of the strains from major MRSA lineages were
transformable, whereas 66% (33/50) of the strains from other
lineages were transformable. Thus, strains from the major MRSA
lineages were more transformable with the
mecA-expressing plasmid
than were other lineages (
P = 0.0001).
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TABLE 3. Clonal distribution of MSSA strains of other MRSA lineages according to efficiency of transformation with pYK20
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TABLE 4. Clonal distribution of MSSA strains of major MRSA lineages according to efficiency of transformation with pYK20
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Stability of pYK20 in MSSA strains.
Another possible explanation for the limited distribution of
mecA to a few major MRSA lineages is that the genomes of the
major MRSA lineages are relatively permissive of the presence
of intact
mecA, whereas genomes that infrequently or never are
found to harbor
mecA are restrictive (
11). If so, then the MSSA
strains from major MRSA lineages would be expected to maintain
functional
mecA, whereas other lineages would be restrictive
and select against expression of
mecA. To test this hypothesis,
pYK20 plasmids were purified from MSSA transformants and used
to transform COLnex. Defective
mecA expression was detected
by the loss of the homogeneous resistance phenotype in transformants
of COLnex, as briefly described in Materials and Methods.
pYK20 purified from 76% (35/46) of the strains from major MRSA lineages yielded 100% of COLnex transformants with homogeneous resistance, whereas only 36% (9/25) of the strains from other lineages did the same (P = 0.0018) (Fig. 1). Thus, MSSA strains from the major MRSA lineages are more favorable to the presence of constitutively expressed mecA than MSSA strains from other lineages.
Phenotype of pYK20 transformants.
Population analysis was performed with the 84 pYK20 transformants,
both ß-lactamase positive and negative. Overall, the
transformants, regardless of whether they were related to MRSA
lineages or not, showed similar patterns of resistance (Fig.
2A). The majority of strains expressed class 2 or class 3 heterogeneous
resistance. ß-Lactamase-positive and ß-lactamase-negative
strains distributed among the various resistance phenotype classes
in a similar fashion (Fig.
2B). Transformants of MSSA strains
from the same CC tended to exhibit similar resistance phenotypes
(Fig.
3). For example, CC8 transformants were relatively heterogeneous,
with four of five strains showing either class 1 or class 2
resistance. CC1 transformants were relatively more resistant,
with six of eight strains showing class 3 resistance.

DISCUSSION
These results indicate that there is an association between
the genetic background of a strain and its transformability
by and maintenance of plasmid-expressed
mecA. MSSA strains from
major MRSA lineages were relatively easily transformed by electroporation
of the pYK20 vector expressing
mecA. In contrast, MSSA strains
from other lineages were much less efficiently transformed.
pYK20 transformants of MSSA strains from major MRSA lineages
faithfully maintained
mecA, whereas strains from other lineages
were more likely to propagate plasmids defective in
mecA expression.
The distribution of SCC
mec within
S. aureus may be partly determined
by strain properties that contribute to transformation efficiency
and the stability of PBP2a expression. Accordingly, major MRSA
lineages may be capable of acquiring the
mecA gene more easily
and maintaining PBP2a expression.
Results obtained with CC1 deserve special mention. mecA expression, as measured by the COLnex assay, was defective in three of seven CC1 transformants. CC1 has relatively recently been identified as an MRSA lineage but is strongly associated with community onset and not with hospital-related outbreaks of infection. CA-MRSA strains, including CC1 strains, commonly carry a type IV SCCmec (13). Interestingly, one of the CC1 MSSA strains examined, MSSA476, carries an SCC element that lacks mecA but expresses ccr genes that mediate excision and insertion. This host strain yielded a relatively high proportion of COLnex transformants that were defective in mecA expression. Perhaps the original mecA copy, assuming that it was once present, was deleted from the resident SCC element because of selection against mecA expression, as was observed with the plasmid-expressed mecA.
There was no significant difference in resistance phenotypes when comparing major MRSA lineages and other lineages. pYK20 transformants tended to show a characteristic resistance level to nafcillin within each CC. This result is consistent with the important effects that chromosomal loci outside of SCCmec have on resistance phenotypes (2), which should be similar within a defined genetic background.
The genetics or biochemical bases of the permissive and restrictive properties of potential mecA recipient genomes are unknown. Our results indicate that the major MRSA lineages may be favored recipients. On the other hand, MSSA strains other than those related to the major MRSA lineages also tolerated mecA to some extent. If the type IV SCCmec enjoys some advantage in its mobility, which seems likely given its smaller size and wider distribution among S. aureus genotypes compared to other SCCmec types (4), then receptive genomes among MSSA strains can and probably will be selected out. This does not bode well for prospects of limiting the spread of MRSA in either hospitals or the community.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by Public Health Service grant AI46610
from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
We thank Dong Hong for excellent technical assistance.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Division of Infectious Diseases, Building 30, Room 3400, San Francisco General Hospital, 1001 Potrero Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94110. Phone: (415) 206-5437. Fax: (415) 648-8425. E-mail:
chipc{at}itsa.ucsf.edu.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, May 2005, p. 2380-2383, Vol. 43, No. 5
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.5.2380-2383.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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