Plasmid-Mediated Resistance to Third-Generation Cephalosporins Caused by Point Mutations in TEM-Type Penicillinase Genes

Abstract
Infections due to strains of Klebsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coli, and Citrobacter freundii resistant to third-generation cephalosporins have been observed recently in France and the Federal Republic of Germany. This resistance phenotype is due to the production of new plasmid-mediated, broad-substrate-range β-lactamases designated TEM-3 to TEM7. DNA-DNA hybridization analysis with a probe specific for TEM-1 indicated that the corresponding genes blaT-3 to blaT-7 were variants of the structural genes for TEM-type β-lactamases. In the present studies, a 2.5-kilobase BamHI plasmid DNA fragment encoding TEM-3 was cloned in E. coli, and the entire nucleotide sequence of blaT-3 was determined. The deduced amino acid sequence of TEM-3 differed in two positions from that of the TEM-2 enzyme: lysine (TEM-3) was substituted for glutamic acid (TEM-2) at residue 104and serine (TEM-3) for glycine (TEM-2) at residue 238 in the numbering system of Ambler. Spontaneous mutants of TEM penicillinases with increased activity against third-generation cephalosporins were obtained in vitro by selection on cefotaxime or ceftazidime. It therefore appears that mutations in TEM-type β-lactamases contribute to resistance to new-generation cephalosporins.