928 resultados para Enterococcus faecium, Vancomycin, Resistenz, Pulsfeld-Gelelektrophorese, gepulstes elektrisches Feld


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Vancomycin-resistente Enterokokken (VRE) treten als Erreger von nosokomialen Infektionen immer häufiger auf und schränken die Therapiemöglichkeiten deutlich ein. In den eigenen Untersuchungen wurde das Vorkommen von Vancomycin-resistenten Enterococcus faecium (VREf) bei Patienten und in der aquatischen Umwelt (Abwasser und Oberflächenwasser) über einen Zeitraum von sechs Jahren (2004 bis 2009) untersucht. Eine Genotypisierung mittels Pulsfeld-Gelelektrophorese (PFGE) von 294 VREf sollte Aufschluss über genetische Verwandtschaften geben. rnEs konnte gezeigt werden, dass VREf in der aquatischen Umwelt weit verbreitet sind. In Bezug auf ihre genetische Diversität zeigten sie ein breites Spektrum an Variabilität. Ebenso konnte im zeitlichen Auftreten von VREf-Typen eine Dynamik beobachtet werden, wodurch sich Veränderungen der Population mit zeitlichem Wechsel ergaben. Enge Verwandtschaften zwischen VREf von Patienten und VREf aus der aquatischen Umwelt konnten nachgewiesen werden. Für zwei VREf gelang der Nachweis des Eintrags in die aquatische Umwelt, von Patienten aus dem Krankenhaus als Eintragsquelle ausgehend, während Zeiten eines Ausbruchs mit nosokomialen Erregern auf den Stationen. rnZusätzlich zur VREf-Population wurden außerdem die Wirkungsweise und Effizienz einer Elektroimpulsanlage untersucht, um ein zukunftsorientiertes Verfahren zur Desinfektion von bakteriell belasteten Abwässern zu entwickeln. Weiterführend wurde getestet, inwiefern sich verschiedene klinisch relevante VREf durch ein gepulstes elektrisches Feld abtöten lassen. rnEs konnte gezeigt werden, dass das synergistische Zusammenwirken des elektrischen Feldes und der Prozesstemperatur die Höhe der Keimzahlreduktion der Enterokokken beeinflussen. Dabei wurde eine isolatabhängige Elektroresistenz der VREf gegenüber gepulsten elektrischen Feldern bewiesen. Die untersuchten VREf ließen sich, im Gegensatz zu einem Vancomycin-sensiblen Stamm, nicht effizient durch die Elektroimpulsanlage abtöten, was den praktischen Einsatz einer solchen Elektroimpulsanlage als wirkungsvolles Desinfektionsverfahren in Frage stellte.

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Objective: To study the ability of two strains of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium to colonize the human intestine. Methods: A single human subject ingested separately two strains of vancomycin-resistant E. faecium isolated from a pig and a chicken. The feces were cultured on selective medium. Prior to ingestion no vancomycin-resistant cocci were present in the feces. Ingestion of 10 4-10 5 CFU resulted in either no colonization or isolation only after enrichment. Ingestion of 10 7 CFU of one strain resulted in colonization for a period of nearly 3 weeks, with fecal counts at times in excess of 10 6 CFU/g. Ingestion of similar numbers of the other strain and reingestion of the first strain resulted in excretion in the feces for much shorter periods. When the fecal count of the ingested strains was greater than 10 4-10 5 CFU/g, the strains were isolated from swabs taken from perianal skin. Conclusions: Vancomycin-resistant E. faecium strains from pigs and poultry a re able to colonize the human gut and the perianal skin.

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Enterococcus faecium has emerged as an important nosocomial pathogen worldwide, and this trend has been associated with the dissemination of a genetic lineage designated clonal cluster 17 (CC17). Enterococcal isolates were collected prospectively (2006 to 2008) from 32 hospitals in Colombia, Ecuador, Perú, and Venezuela and subjected to antimicrobial susceptibility testing. Genotyping was performed with all vancomycin-resistant E. faecium (VREfm) isolates by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and multilocus sequence typing. All VREfm isolates were evaluated for the presence of 16 putative virulence genes (14 fms genes, the esp gene of E. faecium [espEfm], and the hyl gene of E. faecium [hylEfm]) and plasmids carrying the fms20-fms21 (pilA), hylEfm, and vanA genes. Of 723 enterococcal isolates recovered, E. faecalis was the most common (78%). Vancomycin resistance was detected in 6% of the isolates (74% of which were E. faecium). Eleven distinct PFGE types were found among the VREfm isolates, with most belonging to sequence types 412 and 18. The ebpAEfm-ebpBEfm-ebpCEfm (pilB) and fms11-fms19-fms16 clusters were detected in all VREfm isolates from the region, whereas espEfm and hylEfm were detected in 69% and 23% of the isolates, respectively. The fms20-fms21 (pilA) cluster, which encodes a putative pilus-like protein, was found on plasmids from almost all VREfm isolates and was sometimes found to coexist with hylEfm and the vanA gene cluster. The population genetics of VREfm in South America appear to resemble those of such strains in the United States in the early years of the CC17 epidemic. The overwhelming presence of plasmids encoding putative virulence factors and vanA genes suggests that E. faecium from the CC17 genogroup may disseminate in the region in the coming years.

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VanX is a D-Ala-D-Ala dipeptidase that is essential for vancomycin resistance in Enterococcus faecium. Contrary to most proteases and peptidases, it prefers to hydrolyze the amino substrate but not the related kinetically and thermodynamically more favorable ester substrate D-Ala-D-lactate. The enzymatic activity of VanX was previously found to be inhibited by the phosphinate analogs of the proposed tetrahedral intermediate for hydrolysis of D-Ala-D-Ala. Here we report that such phosphinates are slow-binding inhibitors. D-3-[(1-Aminoethyl)phosphinyl]-D-2-methylpropionic acid I showed a time-dependent onset of inhibition of VanX and a time-dependent return to uninhibited steady-state rates upon dilution of the enzyme/inhibitor mixture. The initial inhibition constant Ki after immediate addition of VanX to phosphinate I to form the E-I complex is 1.5 microM but is then lowered by a relatively slow isomerization step to a second complex, E-I*, with a final K*i of 0.47 microM. This slow-binding inhibition reflects a Km/K*i ratio of 2900:1. The rate constant for the slow dissociation of complex E-I* is 0.24 min-1. A phosphinate analog with an ethyl group replacing what would be the side chain of the second D-alanyl residue in the normal tetrahedral adduct gives a K*i value of 90 nM. Partial proteolysis of VanX reveals two protease-sensitive loop regions that are protected by the intermediate analog phosphinate, indicating that they may be part of the VanX active site.

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Three Enterococcus faecium strains isolated successively from the same patient, vancomycin-resistant strain BM4659, vancomycin-dependent strain BM4660, and vancomycin-revertant strain BM4661, were indistinguishable by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and harbored plasmid pIP846, which confers VanB-type resistance. The vancomycin dependence of strain BM4660 was due to mutation P(175)L, which suppressed the activity of the host Ddl D-Ala:D-Ala ligase. Reversion to resistance in strain BM4661 was due to a G-to-C transversion in the transcription terminator of the vanRS(B) operon that lowered the free energy of pairing from -13.08 to -6.65 kcal/mol, leading to low-level constitutive expression of the resistance genes from the P(RB) promoter, as indicated by analysis of peptidoglycan precursors and of VanX(B) D,D-dipeptidase activity. Transcription of the resistance genes, studied by Northern hybridization and reverse transcription, initiated from the P(YB) resistance promoter, was inducible in strains BM4659 and BM4660, whereas it started from the P(RB) regulatory promoter in strain BM4661, where it was superinducible. Strain BM4661 provides the first example of reversion to vancomycin resistance of a VanB-type dependent strain not due to a compensatory mutation in the ddl or vanS(B) gene. Instead, a mutation in the transcription terminator of the regulatory genes resulted in transcriptional readthrough of the resistance genes from the P(RB) promoter in the absence of vancomycin.

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BACKGROUND: Enterococcus faecalis and Enterococcus faecium are associated with faecal pollution of water, linked to swimmer-associated gastroenteritis and demonstrate a wide range of antibiotic resistance. The Coomera River is a main water source for the Pimpama-Coomera watershed and is located in South East Queensland, Australia, which is used intensively for agriculture and recreational purposes. This study investigated the diversity of E. faecalis and E. faecium using Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) and associated antibiotic resistance profiles. RESULTS: Total enterococcal counts (cfu/ml) for three/six sampling sites were above the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) recommended level during rainfall periods and fall into categories B and C of the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) guidelines (with a 1-10% gastrointestinal illness risk). E. faecalis and E. faecium isolates were grouped into 29 and 23 SNP profiles (validated by MLST analysis) respectively. This study showed the high diversity of E. faecalis and E. faecium over a period of two years and both human-related and human-specific SNP profiles were identified. 81.8% of E. faecalis and 70.21% of E. faecium SNP profiles were associated with genotypic and phenotypic antibiotic resistance. Gentamicin resistance was higher in E. faecalis (47% resistant) and harboured the aac(6')-aph(2') gene. Ciprofloxacin resistance was more common in E. faecium (12.7% resistant) and gyrA gene mutations were detected in these isolates. Tetracycline resistance was less common in both species while tet(L) and tet(M) genes were more prevalent. Ampicillin resistance was only found in E. faecium isolates with mutations in the pbp5 gene. Vancomycin resistance was not detected in any of the isolates. We found that antibiotic resistance profiles further sub-divided the SNP profiles of both E. faecalis and E. faecium. CONCLUSIONS: The distribution of E. faecalis and E. faecium genotypes is highly diverse in the Coomera River. The SNP genotyping method is rapid and robust and can be applied to study the diversity of E. faecalis and E. faecium in waterways. It can also be used to test for human-related and human-specific enterococci in water. The resolving power can be increased by including antibiotic-resistant profiles which can be used as a possible source tracking tool. This warrants further investigation.

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This study compared virulence and antibiotic resistance traits in clinical and environmental E. faecalis and E. faecium isolates. E. faecalis isolates harboured a broader spectrum of virulence determinants compared to E. faecium isolates. The virulence traits Cyl-A, Cyl-B, Cyl-M, gel-E and esp were tested and environmental isolates predominantly harboured gel-E (80% of E. faecalis and 31.9% of E. faecium) whereas esp was more prevalent in clinical isolates (67.79% of E. faecalis and 70.37 % of E. faecium). E. faecalis and E. faecium isolated from water had different antibiotic resistance patterns compared to those isolated from clinical samples. Linozolid resistance was not observed in any isolates tested and vancomycin resistance was observed only in clinical isolates. Resistance to other antibiotics (tetracycline, gentamicin, ciprofloxacin and ampicillin) was detected in both clinical and water isolates. Clinical isolates were more resistant to all the antibiotics tested compared to water isolates. Multi-drug resistance was more prevalent in clinical isolates (71.18% of E. faecalis and 70.3 % of E. faecium) compared to water isolates (only 5.66 % E. faecium). tet L and tet M genes were predominantly identified in tetracycline-resistant isolates. All water and clinical isolates resistant to ciprofloxacin and ampicillin contained mutations in the gyrA, parC and pbp5 genes. A significant correlation was found between the presence of virulence determinants and antibiotic resistance in all the isolates tested in this study (p<0.05). The presence of antibiotic resistant enterococci, together with associated virulence traits, in surface recreational water could be a public health risk.

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Enterococcus faecium tem se destacado no cenário das infecções hospitalares, particularmente, amostras portadoras de características de multirresistência. Apesar de serem responsabilizados como agentes etiológicos em diferentes quadros clínicos, fatores associados a patogênese das infecções ainda não estão esclarecidos. Entretanto, sabe-se que a capacidade de formação de biofilmes pode ser responsabilizada como um dos atributos capazes de promover o papel patogênico desses microrganismos. Assim sendo, este estudo se propôs a investigar a capacidade de formação de biofilmes por duas amostras de E. faecium: SS-1274 (derivada da amostra tipo da espécie) e CL-6729 (multirresistente e pertencente a um complexo clonal globalmente disperso). As amostras foram caracterizadas fenotipica e genotipicamente para confirmação da identificação, determinação da susceptibilidade a 17 antimicrobianos, caracterização da concentração mínima inibitória para ampicilina, gentamicina e vancomicina, determinação do genótipo vanA e detecção de genes associados a expressão dos genes asa1, cylA, esp, gelE e hyl. A análise quantitativa da formação por 24h e 72h dos biofilmes foi realizada por metodologia do cristal violeta, em placas de microtitulação de poliestireno. Foram construídas curvas de formação pela avaliação da DO570nm das preparações coradas por cristal violeta em períodos de tempo de 2h a 74h. A influência de subCMIs de ampicilina, gentamicina e vancomicina na formação de biofilmes de E. faecium foi também caracterizada em ensaios de quantificação da biomassa. A presença de DNA e proteínas foi avaliada em ensaios de destacamento e por fluorimetria. A arquitetura, distribuição espacial e reação aos fluorocromos Syto9 e SYPRO Ruby Protein foram evidenciadas por microscopia confocal de varredura a laser. Análises proteômicas através da avaliação por SDS-PAGE e por ESI-Q-TOF também foram empregadas para avaliação de biofilmes versus crescimento planctônico. Nossos resultados demonstraram que a amostra CL-6729 apresentou uma maior biomassa nos tempos analisados. Apesar da menor quantidade de biomassa da amostra SS-1274, o perfil da curva de formação foi semelhante a CL-6729. As análises da matriz por ensaios quantitativos e microscopia confocal revelaram que proteína parece ser um importante constituinte para ambas as amostras, entretanto biofilmes formados na presença de da CMI e durante 24h, parecem sofrer alterações na constituição. Os resultados relativos às espectrometrias de massa sugerem que células de biofilmes de E. faecium podem também estar metabolicamente ativas, devido a identificação de um considerável número de proteínas relacionadas ao metabolismo e divisão celular, similarmente às células planctônicas. No entanto, investigações complementares são necessárias para quantificar as diferenças relacionadas a sua expressão. Foi observado que ambas as amostras independente das variações fenotípicas e genotípicas são capazes de formar biofilmes maduros exibindo constituição e arquitetura similares. Entretanto, nossos resultados sugeriram que cada amostra responde as diferentes situações de acordo com seus determinantes de virulência e resistência.

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Nas últimas décadas, Enterococcus resistentes à vancomicina tem se destacado no cenário hospitalar em todo mundo. A emergência da resistência à vancomicina no Estado do Rio de Janeiro foi registrada em 2000, na espécie Enterococcus faecalis. Em seguida, Enterococcus faecium passou a ser prevalente. O objetivo deste estudo foi avaliar a diversidade genética das amostras de E. faecium sensíveis (VSEfm) e resistentes (VREfm) à vancomicina, isoladas em diferentes instituições de saúde do Estado do Rio de Janeiro no período de 1993 a 2008. As amostras bacterianas foram avaliadas por metodologia de eletroforese em campo pulsado (PFGE), após restrição com Smal, análise do polimorfismo numérico de segmentos repetitivos (MLVA) e tipagem por sequenciamento de múltiplos loci (MLST); além da detecção de marcadores fenotípicos, como a resistência à ampicilina e à ciprofloxacina, e genotípicos, como determinantes genéticos de virulência, que estão vinculados a um complexo clonal globalmente disperso (CC17). A diversidade de Tn1546 (que alberga o conjunto gênico vanA) foi determinada por amplificação e restrição com ClaI. Um grupo clonal prevalente foi observado pela metodologia de PFGE e agrupou amostras isoladas, principalmente, no período de 2004 a 2006, estando disseminado por diversas instituições de saúde do Estado, indicando transmissão inter- e intra-hospitalar. A avaliação por MLVA identificou dois MTs prevalentes dentre as amostras VREfm: MT12 relacionado à maioria das amostras dos principais grupos clonais identificados por PFGE e, o MT159 que apresentou frequência aumentada no ano de 2008. A análise por MLST destacou o ST78 associado aos principais grupos clonais definidos por PFGE, bem como, ao MT12. Também foi observada correlação entre o ST412 associado ao grupo clonal formado por apenas amostras de 2008 e o MT159. Foi notório por MLST que as amostras VREfm do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, no período do estudo, estiveram relacionadas CC17, juntamente com algumas amostras VSEfm. Entretanto, os principais marcadores de resistência e de virulência, característicos de CC17, estiveram mais relacionados as amostras VREfm do que as VSEfm, como resistência à ampicilina e à ciprofloxacina; e a presença do gene esp e do alelo purK1. A identificação de VSEfm pertencentes ao CC17 sugerem que amostras já adaptadas ao ambiente hospitalar, podem ter adquirdo o determinante de resistência vanA, facilitando a emergência de amostras de VREfm. Adicionalmente, nossos dados sugerem uma modificação no cenário de amostras VREfm no Rio de Janeiro. Pois a dominância de um grupo clonal prevalente (PFGE- X; MT12; ST78) pode estar sendo substituída pela possível emergência de um novo grupo clonal, que foi característico de amostras mais recentes (PFGE-XV; MT159; ST412), apontando assim, para um novo curso na epidemiologia dos E. faecium no Estado. Um perfil de restrição prevalente de Tn1546 idêntico ao protótipo foi observado, apontando que a disseminação da resistência à vancomicina ocorreu por também por transferência horizontal. Entretanto, alterações do tipo deleção e presença de elementos de inserção com aproximadamente 2 kb foram observadas em um número reduzido das amostras. A incongruência no genótipo vanA, em relação ao fenótipo, foi observado para uma amostra. Considera-se fundamental o acompanhamento da disseminação de VREfm, particularmente diante da elevada frequência de amostras pertencentes a um complexo clonal que conjuga multirresistência com virulência, com elevado potencial de adaptabilidade e disseminação.

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We report a case series of 11 patients with severe E. faecium infections treated with daptomycin. All strains were resistant to ampicillin (MIC >8 mg/l), but susceptible to vancomycin. Seven out of 11 strains were also highly resistant to gentamicin (MIC >500 mg/l). All patients were treated with multiple broad-spectrum antibiotics prior to isolation of E. faecium and had severe underlying diseases. Our experience suggests that salvage therapy with daptomycin might be a safe and efficacious treatment for E. faecium infections.

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Enterococcus faecium has emerged as one of the most important pathogens in healthcare-associated infections worldwide due to its intrinsic and acquired resistance to many antibiotics, including vancomycin. Antimicrobial photodynamic therapy (aPDT) is an alternative therapeutic platform that is currently under investigation for the control and treatment of infections. PDT is based on the use of photoactive dye molecules, widely known as photosensitizer (PS). PS, upon irradiation with visible light, produces reactive oxygen species that can destroy lipids and proteins causing cell death. We employed Galleria mellonella (the greater wax moth) caterpillar fatally infected with E. faecium to develop an invertebrate host model system that can be used to study the antimicrobial PDT (alone or combined with antibiotics). In the establishment of infection by E. faecium in G. mellonella, we found that the G. mellonella death rate was dependent on the number of bacterial cells injected into the insect hemocoel and all E. faecium strains tested were capable of infecting and killing G. mellonella. Antibiotic treatment with ampicillin, gentamicin or the combination of ampicillin and gentamicin prolonged caterpillar survival infected by E. faecium (P = 0.0003, P = 0.0001 and P = 0.0001, respectively). In the study of antimicrobial PDT, we verified that methylene blue (MB) injected into the insect followed by whole body illumination prolonged the caterpillar survival (P = 0.0192). Interestingly, combination therapy of larvae infected with vancomycin-resistant E. faecium, with antimicrobial PDT followed by vancomycin, significantly prolonged the survival of the caterpillars when compared to either antimicrobial PDT (P = 0.0095) or vancomycin treatment alone (P = 0.0025), suggesting that the aPDT made the vancomycin resistant E. faecium strain more susceptible to vancomycin action. In summary, G. mellonella provides an invertebrate model host to study the antimicrobial PDT and to explore combinatorial aPDT-based treatments.

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The global emergence of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREfm) has been characterized by a clonal spread of strains belonging to clonal complex 17 (CC17). Genetic features and clonal relationships of 53 VREfm isolated from patients in 2 hospitals in Ribeirao Preto, Sao Paulo, Brazil, during 2005-2010 were determined as a contribution to the Brazilian evolutionary history of these nosocomial pathogens. All isolates were daptomycin susceptible, vancomycin-resistant, and had the vanA gene. The predominant virulence genes were acm and esp. Only 5 VREfm isolated in 2005-2006 had intact Tn1546, while 81% showed Tn1546 with deleted left extremity and insertion of IS1251 between the vanS and vanH genes. Multilocus sequence typing analysis permitted the identification of 9 different sequence types (STs), with 5 being new ones (656, 657, 658, 659, and 660). Predominant STs were ST412 and ST478, all belonging to CC17, except ST658. This is the first report of the ST78 in Brazil. (c) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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BACKGROUND: The Enterococcus faecium genogroup, referred to as clonal complex 17 (CC17), seems to possess multiple determinants that increase its ability to survive and cause disease in nosocomial environments. METHODS: Using 53 clinical and geographically diverse US E. faecium isolates dating from 1971 to 1994, we determined the multilocus sequence type; the presence of 16 putative virulence genes (hyl(Efm), esp(Efm), and fms genes); resistance to ampicillin (AMP) and vancomycin (VAN); and high-level resistance to gentamicin and streptomycin. RESULTS: Overall, 16 different sequence types (STs), mostly CC17 isolates, were identified in 9 different regions of the United States. The earliest CC17 isolates were part of an outbreak that occurred in 1982 in Richmond, Virginia. The characteristics of CC17 isolates included increases in resistance to AMP, the presence of hyl(Efm) and esp(Efm), emergence of resistance to VAN, and the presence of at least 13 of 14 fms genes. Eight of 41 of the early isolates with resistance to AMP, however, were not in CC17. CONCLUSIONS: Although not all early US AMP isolates were clonally related, E. faecium CC17 isolates have been circulating in the United States since at least 1982 and appear to have progressively acquired additional virulence and antibiotic resistance determinants, perhaps explaining the recent success of this species in the hospital environment.

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The hyl(Efm) gene (encoding a putative hyaluronidase) has been found almost exclusively in Enterococcus faecium clinical isolates, and recently, it was shown to be on a plasmid which increased the ability of E. faecium strains to colonize the gastrointestinal tract. In this work, the results of mating experiments between hyl(Efm)-containing strains of E. faecium belonging to clonal cluster 17 and isolated in the United States and Colombia indicated that the hyl(Efm) gene of these strains is also carried on large plasmids (>145 kb) which we showed transfer readily from clinical strains to E. faecium hosts. Cotransfer of resistance to vancomycin and high-level resistance (HLR) to aminoglycosides (gentamicin and streptomycin) and erythromycin was also observed. The vanA gene cluster and gentamicin resistance determinants were genetically linked to hyl(Efm), whereas erm(B) and ant(6)-I, conferring macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B resistance and HLR to streptomycin, respectively, were not. A hyl(Efm)-positive transconjugant resulting from a mating between a well-characterized endocarditis strain [TX0016 (DO)] and a derivative of a fecal strain of E. faecium from a healthy human volunteer (TX1330RF) exhibited increased virulence in a mouse peritonitis model. These results indicate that E. faecium strains use a strategy which involves the recruitment into the same genetic unit of antibiotic resistance genes and determinants that increase the ability to produce disease. Our findings indicate that the acquisition of the hyl(Efm) plasmids may explain, at least in part, the recent successful emergence of some E. faecium strains as nosocomial pathogens.

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A SNP genotyping method was developed for E. faecalis and E. faecium using the 'Minimum SNPs' program. SNP sets were interrogated using allele-specific real-time PCR. SNP-typing sub-divided clonal complexes 2 and 9 of E. faecalis and 17 of E. faecium, members of which cause the majority of nosocomial infections globally.