cover page write 4 full Pages please

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Breadcrumb Abstract Shape
Breadcrumb Abstract Shape
Breadcrumb Abstract Shape
Breadcrumb Abstract Shape
Breadcrumb Abstract Shape
  • 20 Mar, 2021
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cover page write 4 full Pages please

Carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKP) increasingly cause high-mortality outbreaks in hospital settings globally.
Following a patient fatality at a hospital in Beijing due to a blaKPC-2-positive CRKP infection, close monitoring was put in place
over the course of 14 months to characterize all blaKPC-2-positive CRKP in circulation in the hospital. Whole genome
sequences were generated for 100 isolates from blaKPC-2-positive isolates from infected patients, carriers and the hospital
environment. Phylogenetic analyses identified a closely related cluster of 82 sequence type 11 (ST11) isolates circulating in
the hospital for at least a year prior to admission of the index patient. The majority of inferred transmissions for these
isolates involved patients in intensive care units. Whilst the 82 ST11 isolates collected during the surveillance effort all had
closely related chromosomes, we observed extensive diversity in their antimicrobial resistance (AMR) phenotypes. We were
able to reconstruct the major genomic changes underpinning this variation in AMR profiles, including multiple gains and
losses of entire plasmids and recombination events between plasmids, including transposition of blaKPC-2. We also identified
specific cases where variation in plasmid copy number correlated with the level of phenotypic resistance to drugs,
suggesting that the number of resistance elements carried by a strain may play a role in determining the level of AMR. Our
findings highlight the epidemiological value of whole genome sequencing for investigating multi-drug-resistant hospital
infections and illustrate that standard typing schemes ca

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