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Efflux Pump, the Masked Side of ß-Lactam Resistance in Klebsiella pneumoniae Clinical Isolates

Abstract

Background

β-lactamase production and porin decrease are the well-recognized mechanisms of acquired ß-lactam resistance in Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates. However, such mechanisms proved to be absent in K. pneumoniae isolates that are non susceptible to cefoxitin (FOX) and succeptible to amoxicillin+clavulanic acid in our hospital. Assessing the role of efflux pumps in this β-lactam phenotype was the aim of this study.

Methodology/Findings

MICs of 9 β-lactams, including cloxacillin (CLX), and other antibiotic families were tested alone and with an efflux pump inhibitor (EPI), then with both CLX (subinhibitory concentrations) and EPI against 11 unique bacteremia K. pneumoniae isolates displaying the unusual phenotype, and 2 ATCC strains. CLX and EPI-dose dependent effects were studied on 4 representatives strains. CLX MICs significantly decreased when tested with EPI. A similar phenomenon was observed with piperacillin+tazobactam whereas MICs of the other β-lactams significantly decreased only in the presence of both EPI and CLX. Thus, FOX MICs decreased 128 fold in the K. pneumoniae isolates but also16 fold in ATCC strain. Restoration of FOX activity was CLX dose-dependent suggesting a competitive relationship between CLX and the other β-lactams with regard to their efflux. For chloramphenicol, erythromycin and nalidixic acid whose resistance was also due to efflux, adding CLX to EPI did not increase their activity suggesting differences between the efflux process of these molecules and that of β-lactams.

Conclusion

This is the first study demonstrating that efflux mechanism plays a key role in the β-lactam susceptibility of clinical isolates of K. pneumoniae. Such data clearly evidence that the involvement of efflux pumps in ß-lactam resistance is specially underestimated in clinical isolates.

Introduction

Klebsiella pneumoniae, a member of Enterobacteriaceae family, is an important pathogen in both the community and the hospital setting [1]. Over the last 20 years, attention has particularly been paid to K. pneumoniae K1 isolates causing pyogenic liver abscesses and also to multidrug-resistant K. pneumoniae isolates, primarily observed in the hospital and currently also in the community [1][3].

β-lactamase production and reduced porin levels are the main mechanisms of ß-lactam resistance reported in K. pneumoniae isolates [4]. We recently observed clinical isolates with a paradoxal β-lactam phenotype suggesting mechanisms not linked to β-lactamase acquisition: these isolates were less susceptible to cefoxitin and susceptible to both amoxicillin/clavulanic acid and extended-spectrum cephalosporins. Cefoxitin resistance in enterobacterial isolates without chromosomal AmpC β-lactamase suggests the production of an AmpC-plasmid-mediated enzyme. This mechanism could not be retained because the isolates were susceptible to amoxicillin/clavulanic acid which is inconsistent with a plasmid-mediated-AmpC production [5]. Alternatively, the β-lactam-resistant phenotype and the chloramphenicol and nalidixic acid resistance may suggest a modification of the membrane permeability in the isolates [6]. The final mechanism which may be involved in cefoxitin resistance is active efflux. Such a possibility has recently been hypothesized, but not yet demonstrated [7].

An analysis of the microbiology hospital laboratory database showed that this unusual β-lactam phenotype was present in almost 5% of all K. pneumoniae clinical isolates in our hospital for the last 8 years. These isolates were epidemiologically unrelated, obtained from various specimens (urine 41%, deep-seated pus and fluids 20%, blood 14%, drainage fluids 8%, broncho-pulmonary aspirates 4%, other 13%) and originated from different hospital wards (surgery 33%, medicine 31%, intensive care units (ICU) 25%, emergency 9%, and obstetrics 2%).

The main purpose of this study was to assess the role of efflux pumps in the unusual β-lactam resistant phenotype that is emerging in clinical isolates.

Results

Molecular typing and β-lactamase content of isolates

A unique RAPD profile was found from each K. pneumoniae isolate (Table 1). No TEM- and AmpC- encoding genes were detected in these isolates.

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Table 1. Clinical and molecular characters of 11 K. pneumoniae clinical isolates less susceptible to cefoxitin and susceptible to amoxicillin+clavulanic acid.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004817.t001

The 3 chromosomal bla gene types previously described in K. pneumoniae [8] were found in all isolates, the most common type (n = 8) being blaSHV (Table 1).

Immunodetection of AcrA-TolC components and porins

To investigate a possible alteration of membrane permeability due to an increase in the major RND efflux pump, AcrAB [6], [9], [10], and a decrease in porin production [11], immunodetection analyses were performed on clinical isoates. Concerning the efflux mechanism, five (KPBj 1, 3, 5, 9, and 11) of the eleven isolates expressed AcrA at a level similar to that of the reference strain ATCC 11296 and six (KPBj 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, and 10) at a higher level (Figure 1). Regarding TolC, four strains (KPBj 6, 7, 8, and 11) exhibited a higher signal than that of strain ATCC 11296 (Figure 1).

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Figure 1. Detection of AcrA and TolC in Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates.

Top part, immunodetection was carried out with antiserum directed against denatured AcrA; bottom part, immunodetection was carried out with antiserum directed against denatured TolC porin. WT, E. aerogenes wild type strain producing normal level of AcrA and TolC; acrA, acrA deleted strain; tolC, tolC deleted strain [16]. a and b indicate the migration of the molecular weight marker 30 kD and 43 kD, respectively. ATCC, ATCC11296, lanes 1 to 11, strain KPBj 1 to strain KPBj 11.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004817.g001

For porin expression, all isolates except for strain KPBj 6, exhibited a positive signal with variable intensity when the detection was carried out with the antisera directed against porins (Figure 2). Similar results were obtained with a specific antibody directed against the internal loop of enterobacterial porins (data not shown). In contrast, OmpA was detected in all isolates (Figure 2).

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Figure 2. Detection of porins in Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates.

Top part, immunodetection was carried out with antiserum directed against denatured OmpF porin; bottom part, immunodetection was carried out with antiserum directed against denatured OmpC porin. In the two incubation assays, antiserum directed against denatured OmpA was used as control. ATCC: ATCC11296; lane 1 to 11, strain KPBj 1 to strain KPBj 11; OmpF and OmpC illustrate the migration of the E. coli porins in the same conditions (used as internal standards in SDS-PAGE). Arrows and circles indicate the migration of porins and OmpA, respectively; a, indicates the migration of the molecular weight marker (30 kD).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004817.g002

Antibiotic susceptibility

The K. pneumoniae isolates showed an extended multidrug-resistance profile according to MICs of the antibiotics tested (Table 2). Most isolates exhibited a resistance level to chloramphenicol, nalidixic acid, amoxicillin, piperacillin and cefoxitin. MICs of cloxacillin and erythromycin, two antibiotics known to be non active on Enterobacteriaceae, were extremely high. The absence of mutations in the quinolone resistance determining region (QRDR) of GyrA and ParC as well as the absence of qnr genes was checked in the eleven isolates (data not shown).

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Table 2. MICs of various antibiotics tested alone and with efflux inhibitor PAβN* towards 11 K. pneumoniae clinical isolates and ATCC strains.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004817.t002

We have previously demonstrated that phenylalanine-arginine ß-naphthylamide (PAßN) is able to block the efflux pumps involved in antibiotic expel in E. aerogenes and Klebsiella pneumoniae clinical strains [12], [13]. This efflux pump inhibitor is able to restore partially or totally, depending on the presence of additional resistance mechanisms, the susceptibility to several antibiotics in resistant isolates and it can be fruitfully used to detect the presence of an inhibitor-sensitive efflux in resistant enterobacterial strains [14][16]. Adding the efflux inhibitor PAßN resulted in a significant decrease in MICs of some antibiotics to which wild type K. pneumoniae isolates are susceptible - chloramphenicol, nalidixic acid, ofloxacin - and also to which K. pneumoniae isolates are inherently resistant - cloxacillin and erythromycin (Table 2). On the contrary, the addition of PAßN did not significantly modify MICs of the ß-lactam molecules tested - amoxicillin alone and associated with clavulanic acid (an inhibitor of class A β-lactamases), piperacillin, cefoxitin, ceftazidime, cefepime and ertapenem, - except for piperacillin associated with tazobactam, another inhibitor of class A β-lactamases (Table 2).

ß-lactam susceptibility and competitive assays

With the same strains and under the same conditions, we observed a 4 to 128-fold decrease in cefoxitin MICs tested in the presence of PAßN when cloxacillin was added at sub-inhibitory concentrations (1/20 MIC). Such an addition led to no variation of nalidixic acid MICs tested in the presence of PAßN (Table 3). The reduction of the MIC for cefoxitin by PAßN was less effective in strain KPBj 6 which was porin deficient (Table 3).

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Table 3. MICs of cefoxitin and nalidixic acid tested alone and with inhibitor efflux (PAβN) and sub-inhibitory concentrations of cloxacillin towards 4 representative K. pneumoniae strains.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004817.t003

To characterize the apparent competitive efflux between cefoxitin and cloxacillin in the presence of PAßN, a cloxacillin dose-effect experience was carried out (Figure 3). At a cloxacillin concentration of 0.094 mM, cefoxitin MICs were significantly reduced against all strains. In contrast, no variation was detected when the competition assay was carried out with nalidixic acid (Table 4).

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Figure 3. MICs of cefoxitin for two K. pneumoniae isolates (KpBj 7 and 9) and strain ATCC 11296 measured in the presence of efflux inhibitor PAβN (0.096 mM) and increased concentrations of cloxacillin (CLX).

MIC percent (MIC%) represents the decrease in cefoxitin MIC in the presence of different CLX concentrations (plotted as CLX (mM)) compared with MIC measured without PAßN and CLX.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004817.g003

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Table 4. Cloxacillin dose-effect on MICs of nalidixic acid tested alone and with PAβN towards 4 representative K. pneumoniae strains.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004817.t004

To determine a possible concentration threshold for PAßN effect on cefoxitin MIC in the presence of cloxacillin, a dose assay was carried out with increasing PAßN concentrations and two different cloxacillin concentrations. Table 5 indicates a significant decrease in cefoxitin MICs up to 0.038 mM of PAßN for CLX concentrations 0.094 and 0.117 mM. This PAßN concentration threshold was also observed for increasing the nalidixic acid activity on the same strains (data not shown).

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Table 5. PAßN dose-effect on MICs of cefoxitin tested alone and with two different sub-inhibitory concentrations of cloxacillin towards 4 representative K. pneumoniae strains.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004817.t005

To evaluate the synergic effect conferred by cloxacillin and PAßN, with regard to cefoxitin activity, differentß-lactam molecules were tested in the same conditions (Table 6). A synergic effect was noted with amoxicillin, piperacillin, cefepime, ceftazidime and ertapenem indicating that the antibiotic activity of these ß-lactams was increased in the presence of PAßN plus cloxacillin. As for nalidixic acid, no MIC change was observed with chloramphenicol, ofloxacin and erythromycin when cloxacillin was added to PAßN (data not shown). Finally, addition of clavulanic acid to cefoxitin+PAßN with or without cloxacillin did not modify cefoxitin MICs. On the contrary, addition of clavulanic acid to the amoxicillin, PAßN and cloxacillin mixture led to a higher decrease in amoxicillin MICs (Table 7).

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Table 6. MICs of β-lactam molecules tested alone and with fixed concentrations of PAβN and cloxacillin towards 4 representative K. pneumoniae strains.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004817.t006

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Table 7. MICs of cefoxitin and amoxicillin tested alone and with PAβN, cloxacillin and clavulanic acid towards 4 representative K. pneumoniae strains.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004817.t007

Discussion

Various mechanisms of β-lactam resistance have been described in K. pneumoniae. The most common mechanism consists of various plasmid-mediated -β-lactamases, the most recently described being the carbapenemases KPC [17]. Reduced outer membrane permeability has also been described and generally in association with plasmid-mediated β-lactamases [4]. If the involvement of efflux activity has been clearly demonstrated in K. pneumoniae clinical isolates with regard to various antibiotic families, including chloramphenicol, tetracyclines and quinolones, it has never been the case with respect to β-lactam molecules [12]. We hypothesized that such a mechanism could be active in a group of K. pneumoniae clinical isolates representing approximately 5% of K. pneumoniae isolates in our hospital over the last ten years. This expectation was based on a paradoxal β-lactam resistant phenotype (reduced susceptibility to cefoxitin and susceptibility to both amoxicillin+clavulanic acid and extended spectrum cephalosporins) associated with a conjoint chloramphenicol and quinolone resistance.

Therefore, expression of AcrAB-TolC, two components of the major pump in the Enterobacteriaceae [9], [10] was studied in eleven K. pneumoniae isolates in comparison with strain ATCC 11296. These eleven isolates were clonally unrelated strains, belonged to the different bla gene-based groups of K. pneumoniae and were free of plasmid-mediated AmpC enzymes [8]. Some isolates produced a higher AcrAB-TolC signal compared to strain ATCC 11296 as previously reported in a collection of Turkish multi-drug resistant isolates [12]. In addition, we found that the production of porins, immunorelated to OmpC and OmpF porins, was quite similar to that of strain ATCC 11296 except for one strain, KPBj6, which exhibited a porin deficient phenotype. The OmpA level indicated that this strain exhibited a porin deficient profile without a pleiotropic alteration of membrane proteins [18]. By using PAßN, a well-known EPI [14], [15], we noted that the chloramphenicol, nalidixic acid, ofloxacin, erythromycin and cloxacillin MICs decreased substantially. These antibiotics are well-known substrates of efflux pumps but this is the first sound evidence that cloxacillin is an efflux pump substrate in K. pneumoniae isolates [19]. The addition of sub-inhibitory concentrations of cloxacillin to PAßN induced a significant restoration of ß-lactam activities in the pioneer competitive assay developed here. This effect was observed with the different ß-lactam molecules tested especially with cefoxitin, amoxicillin, piperacillin and cefepime. No MIC decrease was observed with the other antibiotic families tested in the same experimental conditions.

Interestingly, the 16-fold decrease in amoxicillin MIC obtained in the presence of both cloxacilin and PAβN was doubled when clavulanic acid which inhibits hydrolytic activity of the K. pneumoniae chromosomal β-lactamase was added (Table 7). As no effect of clavulanic acid was detected when it was added to the association cefoxitin/PAβN, this indicates that clavulanic acid is not a pump substrate or presents a weak affinity for efflux pump sites compared to cloxacillin added to the same association (cefoxitin/PAßN). Therefore, all these findings strongly suggest that the innate amoxicillin resistance observed in K. pneumoniae would be due to amoxicillin efflux for a part and amoxicillin hydrolysis for the other part. Another balance seems to exist with tazobactam, which is another inhibitor of class A-enzyme. Indeed, adding PAßN to the association piperacillin/tazobactam resulted in a significant decrease in MIC of this association while no increase in susceptibility was noted when PAßN was added to piperacillin alone. This finding strongly suggests that tazobactam is an efflux substrate that exhibitss a reduced affinity for the pump sites compared to cloxacillin. Interestingly, the study of ligand-transporter interaction carried out with purified AcrB has reported the presence of affinity sites exhibiting different affinity constants (KD values from 5.5 to 74.1 µM) for various substrates [20].

The restoration of ß-lactam activity observed in the presence of both EPI and cloxacillin showed that cloxacillin may act as a direct competitor for ß-lactam efflux. This competitive effect was obtained at low concentration of cloxacillin compared to the cloxacillin MIC found for the K. pneumoniae isolates and with the low amounts of PAßN classically used to inhibit the efflux of chloramphenicol and quinolones [12]. This increase in ß-lactam susceptibility, described even in ATCC strain, demonstrates the existence of a ß-lactam efflux pump expressed at low level in K. pneumoniae. Interestingly, we observed a noticeable PAßN-susceptible efflux of cloxacillin in strains KPBj 1 and ATCC strain in contrast to the PAßN-susceptible efflux of chloramphenicol. In addition, a PAßN-susceptible erythromycin efflux was also noted and we have previously demonstrated that macrolide efflux should be independent to AcrAB system [21]. Therefore, as the susceptibility increase does not necessarily require an AcrAB-TolC over expression, two hypotheses may be proposed to explain our findings:

1- The level of AcrAB-TolC expressed in the K. pneumoniae isolates is sufficient to maintain the ß-lactam intracellular concentration under the threshold required for antibacterial activity. If it was the case, due to the presence of different affinity sites located inside the AcrB pump, as mentioned during previous co-crystalization analyses and as suggested by the recent proposed model, it would be possible that the gain generated by conjoint addition of EPI and cloxacillin be due to a synergistic effect [22], [23]. In the same time, EPI would induce a steric hindrance inside the general cavity and cloxacillin would generate a competitive occupation of a ß-lactam affinity site [22]. This attractive hypothesis fits well with the AcrB vestibule entry located at the periplasmic surface of inner membrane, the report mentioning the respective location of PAßN and other ligands inside AcrB cavities, and with the idea of a flux competition conferred by a saturation of pump channel associated with occupation of specific sites exhibiting high affinity for specific drugs (ß-lactam such as cloxacillin) which cannot modify the susceptibility of other antibiotic classes (e.g. quinolone, macrolide) [22]. Recent competition experiments performed with the purified AcrB pump and various ligands have demonstrated that erythromycin is not able to inhibit the binding of other molecules suggesting that different families of drugs recognize different non-overlapping sites [20]. Moreover, Elkins and Mullis have demonstrated the presence of substrate hierarchy or selectivity during competitive experiences using macrolide or steroid uptake, competition occurring inside a same structural class in E. coli [24].

Regarding this hypothesis it is worthwhile of note that the binding of substrates to affinity sites located inside AcrB in Haemophilus influenzae induces noticeable conformational change altering the reactivity of specific residues [25]. In addition, the functional rotation mechanism evidenced for the multidrug efflux pump AcrB may also support this first hypothesis by the existence of three independent efflux sites acting step by step and capable to accept different substrates due to the site flexibility during the loose state [23].

2- The second hypothesis is that there are two pumps acting in these isolates or that selected mutations, in the efflux pump, may increase the selectivity for some substrates over other transported molecules in clinical isolates. In recent reports, several teams have mentioned the activity of pumps, different from AcrAB, which would be involved in antibiotic expel [for a review see 10], [19]. In this case, the respective affinity for the various substrates, ß-lactams, quinolones and macrolides, could be different as previously observed with the Mex pump family in P. aeruginosa [26]. Moreover, this difference also would concern PAßN for which some variations have been reported concerning the range of its efflux inhibitory spectrum [14], [27]. In this condition, two pumps or a selective-modified one would be functioning. In the first case, one expels quinolone, macrolides, PAßN, and also ß-lactams but with a lower efficiency/selectivity, the other having a high affinity for ß-lactam and a reduced affinity for PAßN. In the second case, the affinity for specific antibiotics being increased in the modified pump, the efflux blockage needs a competitive substrate that belongs to the same antibiotic structural class to be effective. This may reflect the variation in the immunodetected signal of efflux pump components obtained with our antibodies. As mentioned in the two hypotheses, the presence of PAßN is necessary in addition to the efficient competitor (CLX). This may support the presence of separate and discrete pockets inside the efflux channel which exhibit different affinity constants and which recognize various molecules (e.g. PAßN and CLX). In the absence of CLX, the PAßN affinity is not sufficient to impair FOX recognition, and in the absence of PAßN the corresponding non-specific site may accommodate FOX molecules with a reduced but significant efficiency to expel the drug (Figure 4).

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Figure 4. Scheme of the selective efflux of ß-lactam molecules and the effect of various molecules.

A: the AcrAB-TolC efflux pump. B: the FOX efflux. C: the effect of PAßN on FOX efflux. D: the effect of PAßN+CLX on FOX efflux. OM, outer membrane; P, periplasmic space; IM, inner membrane; PBP, penicillin binding protein (ß-lactam target). Cloxacillin (CLX) and cefoxitin (FOX) are represented by black squares or black circles respectively; and grey triangles represent the PAßN. Black straight arrows represent the drug penetration through the outer membrane and the black curved lines represent the drug efflux through the efflux pumps. Bold and dotted curved lines indicated the high and low level of FOX efflux respectively. Empty circles and triangles represent the ß-lactam selective sites and the non-selective sites, respectively. PAßN is able to bind to the non-selective site located inside the pump cavity and at a lesser extent (due to affinity) to the ß-lactam site. In the presence of ß-lactam (CLX or FOX), the ß-lactam site is preferentially occupied by the ß-lactam molecules. For clarity reasons, only the first hypothesis was presented. For the second hypothesis (two pumps), the different drug affinity sites (non-selective and ß-lactam selective sites) may be distributed in the two efflux pumps acting in the same time in resistant strains.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004817.g004

Whatever the number and the selectivity of pump acting in these isolates, it is clearly demonstrated that efflux plays a key role in the ß-lactam uptake and susceptibility in K. pneumoniae. It is also clear that this role has been largely underestimated if we take into account the involvement of efflux in the acquisition of additional mechanisms of resistance as shown in Salmonella sp. and Campylobacter sp. [28], [29]. In addition, this study may explain previous reports describing a ß-lactam resistance level without consistent description of enzyme production or porin alteration and evoking a possible role of efflux in K. pneumonia [7]. From the pioneer studies of H. Nikaido on the in vitro efflux pumps activities and the model of efflux mechanism as vacuuming the periplasm, this study clearly highlights the clinical impact of efflux activity in ß-lactam susceptibility for the first time in Enterobacteriaceae [10], [30], [31]. This result is especially important with regard to the previous observations showing that some ß-lactams stimulate the expression of efflux pumps in infecting enterobacteria [32]. In vitro experiments have documented the role of mar cascade in the selection of resistant strains expressing efflux pumps under ß-lactam stress [32]. The emergence of K. pneumoniae isolates exhibiting a ß-lactam efflux, associated or not with a failure of porin expression, directly involved in antibiotic resistance is a predicted event. This may occur in different types of infections and we described here this bacterial strategy which concerns a number of isolates collected during a recent period and which exhibited a specific antibiotic resistance pattern.

This is the first time that the efflux involvement is clearly demonstrated to impact on clinical ß-lactam susceptibility in Enterobacteriaceae. This effect observed in our isolates is especially worrying due to the multiple factors (genetic and chemical) that activate the expression of efflux mechanisms in bacteria belonging to natural flora or possibly involved in nosocomial pathogens.

Materials and Methods

Bacterial strains and clinical data

Eleven K. pneumoniae isolates collected over a period of 5 years (2000–2005) in Beaujon hospital were studied. Ten of them had been isolated from blood and one from drainage fluid (Table 1). The majority of the patients infected by these isolates had hepatogastroenterological diseases (9/11) and 6 were hospitalized in ICU when the K. pneumoniae infection occurred. K. pneumoniae strains ATCC 11296 and 138831 were used as reference strains.

Molecular epidemiology typing

The eleven isolates were typed by Random Amplified Polymorphism DNA (RAPD) [33].

ß-lactamase determination

bla genes encoding AmpC and TEM ß-lactamases were identified by PCR [34]. The chromosomal bla gene of the eleven isolates were amplified and then sequenced as described [8].

Immunocharacterisation of membrane transporters

Exponential-phase bacteria in LB broth were pelleted and solubilized in boiling buffer at 96°C [12]. Total cell protein (OD600 = 0.01 corresponding to equal protein per well) was loaded onto a SDS-polyacrylamide gel (10% polyacrylamide, 0.1% SDS) [12], [18], [35]. Proteins were electro-transferred onto nitrocellulose membranes in transfer buffer. An initial saturating step was performed overnight at 4°C with Tris-buffered sodium (TBS: 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl) containing skimmed milk powder (10%). The nitrocellulose sheets were then incubated in TBS containing skimmed milk powder (5%) and Triton X-100 (0.2%) for 2 h at room temperature in the presence of polyclonal antibodies (1∶2,000 dilution) directed against denatured OmpF porin, denatured OmpC porin, OmpA [18] or against denatured AcrA or TolC [12], [16]. It is important to mention that our previous studies have demonstrated a strong cross-immunoreactivity between E. coli and K. pneumoniae porins [12], [13] due to the conservations of common antigenic regions [35]. Polyclonal antibodies directed against E. coli OmpC and OmpF porins have been used for the detection of expressed porins in the various K. pneumoniae strains. The detection of antigen-antibody complexes was performed with alkaline phosphatase conjugated AffinitiPure goat anti-rabbit IgG antibodies [18].

Antibiotic susceptibility tests

Bacteria were grown in Luria–Bertani (LB) or Mueller–Hinton (MH) broth at 37 C. Susceptibility to amoxicillin (Sigma®), amoxicillin+clavulanic acid (Glaxo SmithKline) piperacillin (Sanofi Aventis®), piperacillin+tazobactam (Wyeth®), cefoxitin (Sigma®), ceftazidime (Sigma®), cefepime (Sigma®), ertapenem (MSD®), cloxacillin (Astellas Pharma), chloramphenicol (Sigma®), nalidixic acid (Sigma®), ofloxacin (Sigma®), and erythromycin (Fluka Biochemika®) was determined by broth dilution method, as previously described [18], [36]. Minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) were determined with an inoculum of 106 CFU in 1 mL of MH broth containing two-fold serial dilutions of each antibiotic. Isolates were classified as susceptible, intermediately susceptible or resistant to the antibiotics tested according to the Antibiogram Committee of the French Society for Microbiology (http://www.sfm.asso.fr).

The efflux pump inhibitor (EPI) phenylalanine arginine ß-naphthylamide (PAßN) was used as previously reported: MICs of each antibiotic were determined in the presence of PAßN [36]. To evaluate a possible role of efflux in the ß-lactam activity, we developed an in vitro assay using different conditions: ß-lactam, ß-lactam+EPI, ß-lactam+EPI+sub-inhibitory concentration of cloxacillin, ß-lactam+EPI+clavulanic acid, and ß-lactam+EPI+sub-inhibitory concentration of cloxacillin+clavulanic acid on four K. pneumoniae strains (ATCC 11296, KPBj 6, KPBj 7 and KPBj 9). Nalidixic acid belonging to another structural antibiotic family was used as internal standard. The results were scored after 18 h at 37°C and were expressed as MICs. The MICs for PAßN were 256–512 mg/L in the various K. pneumoniae isolates.

Plasmid- and GyrA/ParC-mediated resistance to quinolones

Plasmid- and chromosome-encoded quinolone resistance determinants (qnr A, B and S, gyrA and parC genes) were studied [37], [38].

Acknowledgments

We thank D. O'Callaghan, J.M. Bolla, J. Chevalier, and A. Davin-Regli for fruitful discussion. We thank A. Seassau for the preliminary studies of antibiotic susceptibilities. We thank Dr G Jacoby and Dr E Cambau for providing us with strains harbouring plasmid-mediated qnrA, B and S genes.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: JMP JPL MHNC. Performed the experiments: JPL VLG EM FB LN. Analyzed the data: JMP JPL FB MHNC. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: VLG EM FB LN. Wrote the paper: JMP MHNC. Critically revised the paper: JPL. Revised the paper: VLG.

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