Bacteriocin production in vancomycin-resistant and vancomycin-susceptible Enterococcus isolates of different origins.
- Del Campo, R. 1
- Tenorio, C. 1
- Jiménez-Díaz, R. 1
- Rubio, C. 1
- Gómez-Lus, R. 1
- Baquero, F. 1
- Torres, C. 1
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1
Universidad de La Rioja
info
ISSN: 0066-4804
Year of publication: 2001
Volume: 45
Issue: 3
Pages: 905-912
Type: Article
More publications in: Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
Metrics
Cited by
JCR (Journal Impact Factor)
- Year 2001
- Journal Impact Factor: 4.562
- Journal Impact Factor without self cites: 3.599
- Article influence score: 0.0
- Best Quartile: Q1
- Area: MICROBIOLOGY Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 9/81 (Ranking edition: SCIE)
- Area: PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 12/186 (Ranking edition: SCIE)
SCImago Journal Rank
- Year 2001
- SJR Journal Impact: 2.334
- Best Quartile: Q1
- Area: Infectious Diseases Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 10/163
- Area: Pharmacology (medical) Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 2/183
- Area: Pharmacology Quartile: Q1 Rank in area: 9/296
Dimensions
(Data updated as of 30-03-2023)- Total citations: 60
- Recent citations: 3
- Relative Citation Ratio (RCR): 1.7
- Field Citation Ratio (FCR): 3.78
Abstract
Bacteriocin production was determined for 218 Enterococcus isolates (Enterococcusfaecalis [93] and E. faecium [125]) obtained from different origins (human clinical samples [87], human fecal samples [78], sewage [28], and chicken samples [25]) and showing different vancomycin susceptibility patterns (vancomycin resistant, all of them vanA positive [56], and vancomycin susceptible [162]). All enterococcal isolates were randomly selected except for the vancomycin-resistant ones. A total of 33 isolates of eight different bacterial genera were used as indicators for bacteriocin production. Forty-seven percent of the analyzed enterococcal isolates were bacteriocin producers (80.6% of E. faecalis and 21.6% of E. faecium isolates). The percentage of bacteriocin producers was higher among human clinical isolates (63.2%, 81.8% of vancomycin-resistant isolates and 60.5% of vancomycin-susceptible ones) than among isolates from the other origins (28 to 39.3%). Only one out of the 15 vancomycin-resistant isolates from human fecal samples was a bacteriocin producer, while 44.4% of fecal vancomycin-susceptible isolates were. The bacteriocin produced by the vanA-containing E. faecium strain RC714, named bacteriocin RC714, was further characterized. This bacteriocin activity was cotransferred together with the vanA genetic determinant to E. faecalis strain JH2-2. Bacteriocin RC714 was purified to homogeneity and its primary structure was determined by amino acid sequencing, showing an identity of 88% and a similarity of 92% with the previously described bacteriocin 31 from E. faecalis YI717. The presence of five different amino acids in bacteriocin RC714 suggest that this could be a new bacteriocin. The results obtained suggest that the epidemiology of vancomycin resistance may be influenced by different factors, including bacteriocin production.