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Article Abstract

In recent decades, emerged as a major infective menace in healthcare settings due to scarce therapeutic options to treat infections. Therefore, undertaking genome comparison analyses of multi-resistant strains could aid the identification of key bacterial determinants to develop innovative anti-virulence approaches. Following genome sequencing, we performed a molecular characterization of key genes and genomic comparison of two strains, #36 and #150, with selected reference genomes. Despite a different antibiotic resistance gene content, the analyzed strains showed a very similar antibiogram profile. Interestingly, the lack of some important virulence determinants (i.e., , and -) did not abrogate their adhesive abilities to abiotic and biotic surfaces, as reported before; indeed, strains retained these capacities, although to a different extent, suggesting the presence of distinct vicarious genes. Conversely, secretion systems, lipopolysaccharide (LPS), capsule and iron acquisition systems were highly similar to reference strains. Overall, our analyses increased our knowledge on genomic content and organization as well as the genomic events occurring in nosocomial isolates to better fit into changing healthcare environments.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8910769PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19052870DOI Listing

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