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Identification of CFE-2, a new plasmid-encoded AmpC β-lactamase from a clinical isolate of Citrobacter freundii.

A clinical isolate of Citrobacter freundii (JA99) obtained from a bile culture of a Taiwanese patient was found to produce a plasmid-encoded β-lactamase conferring resistance to oxyimino-cephalosporins and cephamycins. Resistance arising from production of the β-lactamase could be transferred by conjugation with an IncW plasmid (pJA99) into Escherichia coli J53. The substrate and inhibition profiles of this enzyme resembled that of an AmpC β-lactamase. The resistance gene of pJA99, cloned and expressed in E. coli DH5α, was shown to contain an open reading frame showing 92% amino acid identity with the plasmid-encoded enzyme CFE-1 of E. coli KU6400. DNA sequence analysis also identified a gene upstream of ampC in pJA99 whose sequence was 95.0% identical to the ampR gene from E. coli KU6400. In addition, orf1, the fumarate operon (frdABCD), blc, lolB and repB surrounding the ampR-ampC genes in C. freundii were identified. This DNA fragment was absent in other Citrobacter spp. Therefore, we describe a new plasmid-encoded AmpC β-lactamase, named CFE-2. This study highlights the emergence of broad-spectrum cephalosporin resistance in C. freundii owing to a new type of AmpC β-lactamase.

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