Technology Development Group, Public Health England, National Infection Service, Salisbury, Wiltshire, United Kingdom.
Biosafety, Air and Water Microbiology Group, Public Health England, National Infection Service, Salisbury, Wiltshire, United Kingdom.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2021 Apr 27;87(10). doi: 10.1128/AEM.00210-21.
Octenidine-based disinfection products are becoming increasingly popular for infection control of multidrug-resistant (MDR) Gram-negative isolates. When a waste trap was removed from a hospital and allowed to acclimatize in a standard tap rig in our laboratory, it was shown that , , and and spp. were readily isolated. This study aimed to understand the potential impact of prolonged exposure to low doses of a commercial product containing octenidine on these bacteria. Phenotypic and genotypic analyses showed that strains had increased tolerance to octenidine, which was characterized by mutations in the Tet repressor SmvR. species demonstrated increased tolerance to many other cationic biocides, although not octenidine, as well as the antibiotics ciprofloxacin, chloramphenicol, and ceftazidime, through mutations in another Tet repressor, RamR. species with mutations in RamR and MarR were identified following octenidine exposure, and this is linked to development of resistance to ampicillin, piperacillin, and chloramphenicol, as well as an increased MIC for ciprofloxacin. Isolates were able to retain fitness, as characterized by growth, biofilm formation, and virulence in , after prolonged contact with octenidine, although there were strain-to-strain differences. These results demonstrate that continued low-level octenidine exposure in a simulated sink trap environment selects for mutations that affect It may also promote microbial adaptation to other cationic biocides and cross-resistance to antibiotics, while not incurring a fitness cost. This suggests that hospital sink traps may act as a reservoir for more biocide-tolerant organisms. Multidrug-resistant (MDR) strains of bacteria are a major clinical problem, and several reports have linked outbreaks of MDR bacteria with bacterial populations in hospital sinks. Biocides such as octenidine are used clinically in body washes and other products, such as wound dressings for infection control. Therefore, increased tolerance to these biocides would be detrimental to infection control processes. Here, we exposed bacterial populations originally from hospital sink traps to repeated dosing with an octenidine-containing product over several weeks and observed how particular species adapted. We found mutations in genes related to biocide and antibiotic susceptibility, which resulted in increased tolerance, although this was species dependent. Bacteria that became more tolerant to octenidine also showed no loss of fitness. This shows that prolonged octenidine exposure has the potential to promote microbial adaptation in the environment and that hospital sink traps may act as a reservoir for increased biocide- and antibiotic-tolerant organisms.
基于奥替尼啶的消毒产品在控制多重耐药(MDR)革兰氏阴性菌方面越来越受欢迎。当从医院中取出一个废水截留器并在我们实验室的标准水龙头装置中使其适应环境时,发现 、 、 和 属很容易被分离出来。本研究旨在了解长时间暴露于含有奥替尼啶的商业产品低剂量下对这些细菌的潜在影响。表型和基因型分析表明, 菌株对奥替尼啶的耐受性增加,这是由 Tet 阻遏物 SmvR 的突变引起的。 种对许多其他阳离子杀生物剂表现出了耐受性,尽管不是奥替尼啶,以及抗生素环丙沙星、氯霉素和头孢他啶,这是通过另一个 Tet 阻遏物 RamR 的突变引起的。在奥替尼啶暴露后,鉴定出具有 RamR 和 MarR 突变的 种,这与对氨苄西林、哌拉西林和氯霉素的耐药性发展以及环丙沙星的 MIC 值增加有关。尽管存在菌株间差异,但在长时间接触奥替尼啶后,这些分离株仍能保持生长、生物膜形成和毒力等适应性。这些结果表明,在模拟水槽截留器环境中持续低水平的奥替尼啶暴露会选择影响 的突变。它还可能促进微生物对其他阳离子杀生物剂和抗生素的交叉耐药性,而不会产生适应性成本。这表明医院水槽截留器可能成为更能耐受杀生物剂的生物体的储存库。多重耐药(MDR)细菌是一个主要的临床问题,有几份报告将 MDR 细菌的爆发与医院水槽中的细菌种群联系起来。奥替尼啶等杀生物剂在临床上用于沐浴露和其他产品,如伤口敷料,以控制感染。因此,对这些杀生物剂的耐受性增加将不利于感染控制过程。在这里,我们将最初来自医院水槽截留器的细菌种群暴露于含有奥替尼啶的产品中,经过数周的反复给药,观察特定物种的适应情况。我们发现与杀生物剂和抗生素敏感性相关的基因发生突变,导致耐受性增加,尽管这取决于物种。对奥替尼啶更耐受的细菌也没有丧失适应性。这表明,长时间的奥替尼啶暴露有可能促进环境中的微生物适应,而医院水槽截留器可能成为增加杀生物剂和抗生素耐药性生物体的储存库。