“…This is responsible for a variety of diseases in humans and animals, such as urinary tract infection, pneumoniae, intra-abdominal infection, bloodstream infection, meningitis, pyogenic liver abscess and is a prominent nosocomial pathogen [1,2]. Moreover, the occurrence and global spread of hypervirulent and MDR (multidrug-resistant) K. pneumoniae are increasingly reported in communityacquired and nosocomial infections [3], and the use of antimicrobials in the treatment of infections has become progressively more difficult [4,5]. However, despite there has been an increase in the number of vulnerable populations to MDR pathogens, in addition to a renewed interest in the Klebsiella pneumoniae, many questions about this pathogen are still unknown, as to how resistance genes spread out and how they reach humans [6].…”