INTRODUCTION
Macrolide antibiotics are a cornerstone in the treatment of infections caused by nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) (
1–6). Point mutations in the 23S rRNA gene can confer constitutive resistance to macrolides, whereas recent studies of rapidly growing mycobacteria (RGM) have identified 23S rRNA methylase (
erm) genes as key mediators of inducible macrolide resistance (
7–9). The chromosomally located
erm(38),
erm(39),
erm(40), and
erm(41) genes are present in
Mycobacterium smegmatis, the
Mycobacterium fortuitum group,
M. mageritense, and
M. wolinskyi, and
Mycobacterium abscessus, respectively (
8,
9). Phenotypic detection of inducible macrolide resistance requires extended antimicrobial susceptibility testing times (up to 14 days of incubation) (
10).
The presence of
erm genes has unequivocally impacted the utility of the macrolides in the treatment of infections caused by many species of RGM. A pivotal study in Korea showed that, when treated with a macrolide-containing regimen, only 25% of pulmonary patients infected with
M. abscessus subsp.
abscessus (with a functional
erm gene) showed clinical improvement, compared with 75% of patients infected with
M. abscessus subsp.
massiliense (without a functional
erm gene) (
11).
M. abscessus subsp.
abscessus is the most commonly isolated RGM species in the United States, and approximately 80% of clinical isolates contain a functional
erm(41) gene (
9,
10).
The original studies of the
erm(41) gene by Nash et al. found no evidence of inducible macrolide resistance among isolates of
M. chelonae after 3 or 14 days of incubation (
8,
9). Similarly, a large 2-year study by Hanson and colleagues of 45 isolates of
M. chelonae also showed no inducible macrolide resistance after 14 days (
12). In 2018, The Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) recommended that extended incubation for detection of inducible macrolide resistance was no longer necessary for some RGM species, including
M. chelonae (
13).
However, beginning in 2018, the Mycobacteria/Nocardia Research Laboratory at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler (UTHSCT) detected clinical isolates of M. chelonae that exhibited elevated MICs (1 to ≥16 μg/mL) to clarithromycin after 3 to 4 days of incubation and high-level resistance (≥16 μg/mL) after extended incubation for up to 14 days. Genomic approaches, including both short-read (Illumina) and long-read (Oxford Nanopore) platforms, were used to characterize these macrolide-resistant isolates of M. chelonae. Here, we describe three variants of a novel 23S rRNA methylase gene, erm(55), present both on a conjugative plasmid and on the M. chelonae chromosome.
DISCUSSION
Since FDA approval of clarithromycin in 1990, macrolides have evolved as the standard of care, initially for
Mycobacterium avium complex and subsequently for infections caused by many slowly growing mycobacteria (SGM) and RGM species, including
M. chelonae (
1–6,
18). Macrolides bind to the bacterial 23S ribosome to inhibit protein synthesis. Changes to the ribosome, due to mutation or enzyme-mediated modification (e.g., methylation), can prevent macrolide binding (
7,
8). Early studies in 1996 by Wallace et al. revealed that point mutations in the A2058 and A2059 positions of the 23S rRNA gene conferred resistance to macrolides (
7). This resistance is constitutive and is reliably detected by measuring MICs after 3 to 5 days of incubation (
7). The subsequent discovery of inducible macrolide resistance, conferred by 23S rRNA methylase (
erm) genes (especially
M. fortuitum group and 80% of isolates of
M. abscessus subsp.
abscessus), has complicated antimicrobial susceptibility testing of RGM and compromised the usefulness of the newer macrolides, clarithromycin and azithromycin (
8–10).
In contrast to
erm(38),
erm(39),
erm(40), and
erm(41) genes, which have only been found on the chromosomes of RGM, we describe here
erm(55) gene variants located on an
M. chelonae chromosomal insertion [
erm(55)
C], a putative (chromosomal) transposon [
erm(55)
T], and a putative 137-kb conjugative plasmid [
erm(55)
P]. Antibiotic resistance due to plasmid-borne R factors has been recognized since the 1950s. However, it was not until 2014 that plasmid-mediated drug resistance was first demonstrated for mycobacteria, when plasmid pMAB01, which carries multiple resistance genes and confers resistance to kanamycin, was recovered from a strain of
M. abscessus subsp.
massiliense (then designated
M. bolletii) responsible for a nationwide outbreak of surgical infections in Brazil (
19). Additional studies are required to characterize the 137-kb pMchErm55 contig for
erm(55)
P. In the current study, annotation of the contig revealed several features of conjugative mycobacterial plasmids, including genes associated with type IV and type VII secretion systems, which appear essential for mycobacterial conjugation (
20). Moreover, the presence of pMchErm55 sequences in data sets from
M. iranicum and
M. obuense suggest that this is a broad-host-range plasmid that can be transferred between RGM species (
21). Except for
erm(55)
P, pMchErm55 does not appear to contain any other antibiotic resistance genes. However, the plasmid does contain homologs to methoxymycolic acid synthase (
mma4) and dimycocerosyl transferase (
papA5). Cell wall modifications mediated by
mma4 or
papA5 may explain the rough colony morphology associated with
erm(55)
P (i.e., pMchErm55-containing strains).
M. iranicum is a scotochromogenic (pigmented) RGM species and a recognized human pathogen first described in 2013 (
22,
23). In 2017, Lymperopoulou et al. published the draft genome of
M. iranicum strain H39, an environmental isolate collected in 2015 (
24). Susceptibility testing of strain H39 was not described, but sequencing reads (SRA
SRX1693165) mapped to 125 kb of pMchErm55 that includes
erm(55)
P. The smaller plasmid size reflects a 12-kb region that includes recombinase and integrase genes which are missing (
Table 3 and
Fig. 2). In 2023, Ranson et al. reported a blood isolate of
M. iranicum (strain UCLA-505) causing a central line infection (
25). The isolate was identified by next-generation sequencing and was inducibly macrolide resistant using CLSI guidelines. Those authors were unable to detect any known
erm gene. Subsequent sequencing reads (
SRR21647431) mapped to pMchErm55 that included
erm(55)
P. Interestingly, the same 12-kb plasmid fragment was missing, as in strain H39 (
Fig. 2).
Mycobacterium obuense, also a scotochromogenic RGM that is a recognized human pathogen, was first characterized by Tsukamura and Mizune in 1971 (
26). The first draft genome of an
M. obuense strain (UCI), recovered in 2008 from sputum, was published in 2015 (
21). The sequence of
M. obuense strain 22DIII was reported in 2019 in a genomic study of NTM recovered from health care-associated environments in Portugal (
27,
28). Strain 22DIII was the only isolate in the study that was macrolide resistant, with a clarithromycin MIC of 16 μg/mL. Although those authors noted that the strain possessed “a classical
erm gene,” additional details were not provided (
27). BLAST analysis indicated that the UC1 and 22DIII strains both contained amino acid sequences identical to the translated sequence of
erm(55)
P. Moreover, the draft genome of strain UC1 includes >83 kb of sequence with >99% identity to pMchErm55. This suggests that pMchErm55 is a conjugative plasmid that can be transferred between multiple RGM species. Comparison of
erm genes and inferred amino acid sequences indicates that
erm(55) is most closely related to
erm(46), initially described in
Rhodococcus species (
Fig. 1) (
29). The
erm(46) gene appears to be quite promiscuous. It belongs to a mobile element that is present on a plasmid (pRErm46).
Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) in NTM has rarely been described except under laboratory conditions (
30–33). A presumptive conjugative 23-kb mercury resistance plasmid, initially found in
M. marinum strain ATCC BAA-535 (
32), was also described in the genomic sequence of the type strain of
M. abscessus subsp.
abscessus (CIP 104536T), published by Ripoll et al. in 2009 (
34). The first conjugative plasmid conferring antibiotic resistance in NTM was described by Leão et al. in 2013 (
35) and further characterized by Matsumoto et al. in 2014 (
19). This was a strain of
M. abscessus (INCQS 00594) recovered in 2008 that was responsible for a nationwide epidemic of more than 2,000 surgical infections in Brazil. The 56,267-bp circular plasmid (pMAB 01) belonged to the broad-host-range Inc P-1β subgroup and contained a complete system for conjugative DNA to transfer and two genetic load regions carrying antimicrobial resistance genes. It was successfully transferred to a modified
Escherichia coli strain but not to other NTMs. (
19,
35). Characterization of the
M. chelonae plasmid (pMchErm55) reported here is ongoing.
There are limitations to our current study. During the early part of the study period (2018 to late 2020), Laboratories A and B were following the current CLSI recommendation to not routinely perform extended (14-day) incubations for clarithromycin susceptibility testing if molecular identification was previously performed (
13). As such, all strains with inducible macrolide resistance due to
erm(55) were recovered from the subset of
M. chelonae isolates that were incubated for 14 days; the complete collection of clinical isolates recovered during 2018 to 2022 may also include additional isolates with
erm(55). Although it is implied that all isolates with the
erm(55)
P allele carry a plasmid, the current PCR-based screen only detects the
erm(55)
P allele, not the plasmid sequence. However, of the two strains of
M. chelonae, two strains of
M. obuense (UCI, 22DIII) (
Table 3), and two strains of
M. iranicum (H39, UCLA-505) (
Table 3) for which
erm(55)
P-flanking region analysis is available, all had plasmid sequences. Similarly, additional experiments are required to demonstrate that the 137-kb contig really is a conjugative plasmid that can be transferred within and between RGM species. Those investigations are in progress.
Our current findings have major implications for antibiotic susceptibility testing of
M. chelonae and the treatment of RGM infections. The discovery of
erm(55) upends the 2018 CLSI recommendations regarding testing for inducible macrolide resistance in
M. chelonae (
13). Extended (14-day) clarithromycin susceptibility testing should be reinstated, pending CLSI evaluation and formal recommendation, at a minimum on isolates with clarithromycin MICs of ≥0.5 μg/mL after 3-day incubation, at least until a rapid and reliable method for detection of all three variant alleles of
erm(55) becomes available. The
M. chelonae isolates examined in the current study were collected during 2018 to 2022. However, the identification of
erm(55)
P in
M. obuense strain UC1, which was isolated in 2008, at least 10 years earlier (
21), clearly indicates that plasmid-mediated macrolide resistance due to this
erm allele is already widespread, albeit an underappreciated phenomenon among RGM.
Greater spread within
M. chelonae strains and transmission to other macrolide-susceptible RGM pathogens, including
M. abscessus subsp.
massiliense and isolates of
M. abscessus subsp.
abscessus with a type II
erm(41) gene (both of which are nonfunctional), will have dire consequences for antimicrobial therapy. These two subspecies of
M. abscessus as well as
M. chelonae are multidrug resistant, and the macrolides are the only proven effective oral antimicrobials.
M. abscessus subspecies are also a major cause of chronic RGM lung disease, especially in the setting of cystic fibrosis and bronchiectasis. The potential spread of plasmids between RGM and SGM is highly likely, given the sequence identity of a 23-kb mercury resistance plasmid in
M. marinum and
M. abscessus subsp.
abscessus (
30–32,
34).
Our study is indeed a plea for newer antimicrobials which are designed to overcome these resistance mechanisms and better understanding of plasmids and their potential role in drug resistance in RGM and in NTM.