The carbapenem inoculum effect provides insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying carbapenem resistance in Enterobacterales.

Alexis Jaramillo Cartagena, Kyra L Taylor, Leslie C Lopez, Jennifer Su, Joshua T Smith, Abigail L Manson, Jonathan D Chen, Virginia M Pierce, Ashlee M Earl, Roby P Bhattacharyya
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Abstract

Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) are important pathogens that can develop resistance via multiple molecular mechanisms, including hydrolysis or reduced antibiotic influx. Identifying these mechanisms can improve pathogen surveillance, infection control, and patient care. We investigated, both phenomenologically and mechanistically, how resistance mechanisms influence the carbapenem inoculum effect (IE), a phenomenon where inoculum size affects antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST). We demonstrated that any of seven different carbapenemases were sufficient to impart a meropenem IE when transformed into a laboratory strain of Escherichia coli . Across 106 clinical CRE isolates spanning 6 genera and 12 species, the carbapenem IE strictly depended on resistance mechanism: all 36 carbapenemase-producing CRE (CP-CRE) exhibited a clear IE, whereas 43 porin-deficient CRE displayed none. 27 isolates with both carbapenemase production and porin deficiency exhibited high-level resistance at all inocula, and still displayed an IE, albeit smaller in magnitude than CP-CRE with intact porins. Mechanistically, we found that clinical CP-CRE release carbapenemase activity into culture supernatant to protect other cells. Further, this released activity markedly increased upon exposure to lethal antibiotic doses, functionally consistent with altruism. Concerningly, 50% and 24% of CP-CRE isolates changed susceptibility classification to meropenem and ertapenem, respectively, across the allowable inoculum range in clinical testing guidelines. The meropenem IE, and the ratio of ertapenem to meropenem minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) at standard inoculum, reliably identified CP-CRE. Understanding how resistance mechanisms affect AST could improve diagnosis and guide therapies for CRE infections.

Importance: Infections caused by carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) pose significant threats to patients and public health worldwide. Carbapenem resistance can occur through several molecular mechanisms, including enzymatic hydrolysis by carbapenemases and reduced influx via porin mutations. Identifying carbapenemase-producing isolates could enable tailored antibiotic selection to improve patient outcomes, and infection control measures to prevent further carbapenemase transmission. In a large collection of CRE isolates, we found that only carbapenemase-producing CRE exhibit an inoculum effect, in which their measured resistance varies markedly with cell density, which risks misdiagnosis. Further, this inoculum effect occurs under conditions where bacteria release carbapenemases to the community upon exposure to antibiotic that results in cell death, functionally consistent with altruism. Measuring this inoculum effect, or integrating other data from routine antimicrobial susceptibility testing, enhances carbapenem resistance detection, paving the way for more effective strategies to combat this growing public health crisis.

碳青霉烯接种物效应提供了对肠杆菌中碳青霉烯耐药性的分子机制的深入了解。
碳青霉烯类耐药肠杆菌(CRE)是一种重要的病原体,可以通过多种分子机制产生耐药性,包括水解或减少抗生素流入。识别这些机制可以改善病原体监测、感染控制和患者护理。我们研究了耐药性机制如何影响碳青霉烯接种物效应(IE),这是一种接种物大小影响抗菌药物敏感性测试(AST)的现象。我们证明了七种不同的碳青霉烯酶在大肠杆菌中赋予美罗培南IE。在110个临床CRE分离株中,碳青霉烯酶IE严格依赖于抗性机制:所有产生碳青霉烯酶类的CRE(CP-CRE)都表现出强烈的IE,而孔蛋白缺陷的CRE则没有表现出。值得注意的是,在临床指南允许的接种范围内,50%和24%的CP-CRE分离株分别改变了对美罗培南和厄他培南的易感性分类。美罗培南IE,以及在标准接种物下厄他培南与美罗培宁最小抑制浓度(MIC)的比率,可靠地鉴定了CP-CRE。了解耐药性机制如何影响AST可以提高CRE感染的诊断和指导治疗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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