Faculty, Staff and Student Publications

Language

English

Publication Date

4-9-2025

Journal

mBio

DOI

10.1128/mbio.03669-24

PMID

40105358

PMCID

PMC11980568

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

3-19-2025

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is a major public health menace. The global spread of MRSA is characterized by successive waves of epidemic clones dominating specific geographical regions. The acquisition of genes encoding resistance to heavy metals (HMRGs) is thought to be a key feature in the geographic divergence of MRSA. However, the cause-effect relationship between the presence of HMRGs and the divergence of MRSA clones remains to be clarified. In this study, we assessed the role that HMRGs may have played in the evolutionary divergence of the MRSA ST5-SCCmecI lineage in Latin America. We conducted a genomic characterization of 113 MRSA clinical isolates from six Latin American healthcare centers, including 53 isolates collected from two cities in Chile (Santiago and Concepción). We found a plasmid (pSCL4752) harboring arsenic, cadmium, and mercury resistance genes in 65% (n = 71) of the ST5-SCCmecI isolates. We also observed a geographic divergence associated with the presence of pSCL4752 in Chilean isolates, with a higher frequency in isolates from Concepción (88%) compared to Santiago (29%). Interestingly, a molecular clock analysis revealed that this divergence occurred in the aftermath of an 8.8 Mw earthquake and tsunami that struck the Concepción area in 2010. Moreover, our results demonstrate that the carriage of pSCL4752 can be beneficial or detrimental for ST5-SCCmecI isolates, depending on the environmental availability of these heavy metals. Our results suggest that the divergence of the ST5-SCCmecI MRSA lineage in Latin America could have been fostered by environmental disasters and influenced by the presence/absence of HMRGs harbored in a plasmid.

Keywords

Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Plasmids, Metals, Heavy, Earthquakes, Humans, Staphylococcal Infections, Chile, Tsunamis, Anti-Bacterial Agents

Published Open-Access

yes

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