A. Gibreel et O. Skold, An integron cassette carrying dfr1 with 90-bp repeat sequences located on the chromosome of trimethoprim-resistant isolates of Campylobacter jejuni, MICROB DR R, 6(2), 2000, pp. 91-98
The frequent occurrence of high-level trimethoprim resistance in clinical i
solates of Campylobacter jejuni was shown to be related to the acquisition
of foreign resistance genes (dfr1 or dfr9 or both) coding for resistant var
iants of the enzyme dihydrofolate reductase, the target of trimethoprim. Th
e dfr1 gene detected on the chromosome of 40 different clinical strains of
C. jejuni was studied further regarding structure and genetic organization.
Most of the dfr1 genes were found as integron cassettes inserted in the ch
romosome. In 36% of the examined isolated, the dfr1 gene showed identity to
that previously characterized in trimethoprim-resistant Escherichia coli,
In 40% of the cases, however, a variant of the dfr1 gene containing a 90-bp
direct repeat was detected, and in 5% of the isolates, the repeat-containi
ng dfr1 variant was found to occur in the form of two cassettes in tandem i
n an integron context. The existence of the 90-bp repeat within the coding
sequence of the dfr1 gene was found to play a role in the adaptation of C.
jejuni to ambient concentrations of trimethoprim.