Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.30.2 (endonuclease)
18,621 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Multiple isolates of Escherichia coli from the blood and urine of a 60-year-old woman with acute pyelonephritis exhibited different biotypes, antimicrobial susceptibility patterns, and plasmid profiles, suggesting the presence of polymicrobial bacteriuria and leaving in question the origin of the bacteremia. Only after bacterial restriction endonuclease analysis of total bacterial DNA was it discovered that all isolates represented the same strain, with plasmid instability possibly accounting for the varied antimicrobial susceptibility patterns observed. We conclude that the biotype, antimicrobial susceptibility profile, and plasmid profile are sometimes inadequate to clarify the relationships between different clinical isolates of E. coli from a single patient and can lead to erroneous epidemiologic conclusions. DNA fingerprinting can resolve dilemmas these less precise techniques leave unresolved.
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PMID:Success of DNA fingerprinting after failure of biotyping, antimicrobial susceptibility testing, and plasmid analysis to reveal clonality of multiple blood and urine isolates from a patient with Escherichia coli urosepsis. 164 17

In 1983, a small outbreak of infections caused by a previously unrecognized multiply-drug-resistant Shigella flexneri 3a strain occurred on the Hopi Indian reservation. The index patient, a diabetic woman with recurrent Escherichia coli bacteriuria on prophylactic trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMZ) therapy, was hospitalized with concurrent E. coli urinary tract infection and shigellosis. Both E. coli isolated from her urine and S. flexneri isolated from her stool were resistant to ampicillin, carbenicillin, streptomycin, sulfisoxazole, tetracycline, and TMP/SMZ. Both isolates contained a 35-MDa plasmid transferrable to recipient E. coli, and transconjugates acquiring the plasmid from either donor strain also acquired resistance to the same agents. The number and size of fragments generated by plasmid digestion with DNA restriction endonuclease ClaI were similar. A review of clinical microbiology records showed that an E. coli strain isolated from the patient 3 w before the onset of shigellosis had identical antimicrobial resistance to the E. coli and Shigella isolated during the outbreak. These studies indicate that the index patient receiving prophylactic TMP/SMZ was the likely source of the R-plasmid for the outbreak strain of Shigella.
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PMID:Interspecies gene transfer in vivo producing an outbreak of multiply resistant shigellosis. 268 26

Between March 1984 and February 1986, ten patients admitted to a spinal cord injury/stroke rehabilitation unit became bacteriuric with a strain of Serratia marcescens resistant to ampicillin, cephalothin, cefoxitin, ticarcillin, cotrimoxazole, gentamicin, and tobramycin. All the patients were catheterized, and in most, bacteriuria was asymptomatic. The organism was also recovered from their hospital environment (sinks, toilets, urine-collecting basins). Analysis of total plasmid content of multiresistant isolates revealed the presence of two plasmids (7 kilobase, 25.5 kilobase), not found in aminoglycoside susceptible strains of Serratia marcescens. Restriction endonuclease analysis and Southern hybridization (DNA probe: 25.5 kilobase plasmid) verified that these plasmids were identical. The 25.5 kilobase plasmid was purified, introduced by transformation into an Escherichia coli strain C recipient, and was found to mediate resistance to gentamicin and tobramycin. The emergence of multiresistant Serratia marcescens coincided with an increase in antibiotic usage on the ward. The reservoir seemed to be the urinary tracts of asymptomatic catheterized patients and their contaminated hospital environment.
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PMID:Molecular and epidemiologic study of multiresistant Serratia marcescens infections in a spinal cord injury rehabilitation unit. 327 39

Between March 1984 and February 1986, ten patients admitted to a spinal cord injury/stroke rehabilitation unit became bacteriuric with a strain of Serratia marcescens resistant to ampicillin, cephalothin, cefoxitin, ticarcillin, cotrimoxazole, gentamicin, and tobramycin. All the patients were catheterized, and in most, bacteriuria was asymptomatic. The organism was also recovered from their hospital environment (sinks, toilets, urine-collecting basins). Analysis of total plasmid content of multiresistant isolates revealed the presence of two plasmids (7 kilobase, 25.5 kilobase), not found in aminoglycoside susceptible strains of Serratia marcescens. Restriction endonuclease analysis and Southern hybridization (DNA probe: 25.5 kilobase plasmid) verified that these plasmids were identical. The 25.5 kilobase plasmid was purified, introduced by transformation into an Escherichia coli strain C recipient, and was found to mediate resistance to gentamicin and tobramycin. The emergence of multiresistant Serratia marcescens coincided with an increase in antibiotic usage on the ward. The reservoir seemed to be the urinary tracts of asymptomatic catheterized patients and their contaminated hospital environment.
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PMID:Molecular and epidemiologic study of multiresistant Serratia marcescens Infections in a spinal cord injury rehabilitation unit. 1972 33