Evolution of Chlorhexidine Susceptibility and of the EfrEF Operon among Enterococcus faecalis from Diverse Environments, Clones, and Time Spans
Publication date
2022-08-31
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
No license information available
Abstract
Chlorhexidine (CHX) is widely used to control the spread of pathogens (e.g., human/animal clinical settings, ambulatory care, food industry). Enterococcus faecalis, a major nosocomial pathogen, is broadly distributed in diverse hosts and environments facilitating its exposure to CHX over the years. Nevertheless, CHX activity against E. faecalis is understudied. Our goal was to assess CHX activity and the variability of ChlR-EfrEF proteins (associated with CHX tolerance) among 673 field isolates and 1,784 E. faecalis genomes from the PATRIC database from different sources, time spans, clonal lineages, and antibiotic-resistance profiles. The CHX MIC (MIC CHX) and minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC CHX) against E. faecalis presented normal distributions (0.5 to 64 mg/L). However, more CHX-tolerant isolates were detected in the food chain and recent human infections, suggesting an adaptability of E. faecalis populations in settings where CHX is heavily used. Heterogeneity in ChlR-EfrEF sequences was identified, with isolates harboring incomplete ChlR-EfrEF proteins, particularly the EfrE identified in the ST40 clonal lineage, showing low MIC CHX (#1mg/L). Distinct ST40-E. faecalis subpopulations carrying truncated and nontruncated EfrE were detected, with the former being predominant in human isolates. This study provides a new insight about CHX susceptibility and ChlR-EfrEF variability within diverse E. faecalis populations. The MIC CHX/MBC CHX of more tolerant E. faecalis (MIC CHX = 8 mg/L; MBC CHX = 64 mg/L) remain lower than in-use concentrations of CHX ($500 mg/L). However, increased CHX use, combined with concentration gradients occurring in diverse environments, potentially selecting multidrug-resistant strains with different CHX susceptibilities, signals the importance of monitoring the trends of E. faecalis CHX tolerance within a One Health approach.
Keywords
Bacillota (former Firmicutes), One Health, biocide, minimum bactericidal concentration, minimum inhibitory concentration, Physiology, Ecology, General Immunology and Microbiology, Genetics, Microbiology (medical), Cell Biology, Infectious Diseases, Journal Article
Citation
Pereira, A P, Antunes, P, Willems, R, Corander, J, Coque, T M, Peixe, L, Freitas, A R & Novais, C 2022, 'Evolution of Chlorhexidine Susceptibility and of the EfrEF Operon among Enterococcus faecalis from Diverse Environments, Clones, and Time Spans', Microbiology spectrum, vol. 10, no. 4, e0117622. https://doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01176-22