Knowing the entire sequence of the gene encoding the DNA gyrase Subunit A (gyrA) of Edwardsiella tarda could be very useful for confirming the role of gyrA in quinolone resistance. Degenerate primers for the amplification of gyrA were designed from consensus nucleotide sequences of gyrA from 9 different Gram-negative bacteria, including Escherichia coli. With these primers, DNA segments of the predicted size were amplified from the genomic DNA of E. tarda and then the flanking sequences were determined by cassette ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction. The nucleotide sequence of gyrA was highly homologous to those of other bacterial species, in both the whole open-reading frame and the quinolone-resistance-determining region (QRDR). The 2637-bp gyrA gene encodes a protein of 878 amino acids, preceded by a putative promoter, ribosome binding site and inverted repeated sequences for cruciform structures of DNA. However, the nucleotide sequence of the flanking region did not show any homologies with those of other bacterial DNA gyrase Subunit B genes (gyrB) and suggested the gyrase genes, gyrA and gyrB, are noncontinuous on the chromosome of E. tarda. All of the 12 quinolone-resistant isolates examined have an alteration within the QRDR, Ser 83 →Arg, suggesting that, in E. tarda, resistance to quinolones is primarily related to alterations in gyrA. Transformation with the full sequence of E. tarda gyrA bearing the Ser 83 →Arg mutation was able to complement the sequence of the gyrA temperaturesensitive mutation in the E. coli KNK453 strain and to induce increased resistance to quinolone antibiotics at 42°C.
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