Sequence Type Changes Associated with Decreasing Macrolide-Resistant Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Japan

We compared sequence types (STs) of Mycoplasma pneumoniae isolates from Japan during 2002–2019. ST3 and ST14 dominated during 2002–2016, and ST7 and ST33 dominated during 2018–2019. These STs were associated with a decrease in macrolide-resistant strains after an epidemic of infection with M. pneumoniae during 2011–2012.


The Study
We obtained nasopharyngeal swab samples from patients who had pneumonia or bronchitis at 21 medical institutions throughout Japan during October 2018-July 2019. We collected samples after obtaining informed consent from patients or their family members (Ethics Committee approval no. 2016-0015, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan).
We suspended samples in 0.5 mL of pleuropneumonia-like organism broth (Difco, https://www. fishersci.com). We then performed DNA extraction by using a described protocol (4). We used a Cycleave PCR Kit (Takara Bio, https://www.takarabio.com) to detect M. pneumoniae. For confirmed cases of infection with M. pneumoniae, we used a Cycleave PCR to distinguish between macrolide-susceptible and macrolide-resistant strains (5). Cultures were grown in pleuropneumonia-like organism broth, according to previously described methods (6).
During the 2018-2019 study period, 105 samples were received (mean patient age 8 years). M. pneumoniae was confirmed by real-time PCR in 83 (79.0%), and culturing was successful in 53 (50.5%). Of these 53 isolates, only 6 (11.3%) were macrolide-resistant M. pneumoniae. All of these macrolide-resistant strains had an A2063G mutation in the 23S rRNA gene.
We provide yearly changes in macrolide-resistant M. pneumoniae during 2002-2019 (except for 2014 and 2017) in Japan (Table). Data from the earlier years beginning in 2002 were reported previously (2,6,7). Our study group results from the earlier periods  We determined relationships between CC and STs according to goeBURST (Figure 2). The data include 470 strains from our study and 62 strains registered in the MLST database from other countries. Of the 2 CC clusters, the CC1 centered on ST3, and CC2 centered on ST2. ST7 and ST33, which were prevalent during 2018-2019, belonged to CC2. Although ST14 was the most prevalent member of CC2 until 2016, ST33 replaced it and increased during 2018. Both ST14 and ST33 were derived from ST15 and showed a single-locus variant of the adk gene. We registered ST34, which was derived from ST33, as a new ST.
Results for P1 typing of M. pneumoniae showed that STs belonging to CC1 were type 1 and STs belong to CC2 were type 2. ST14, ST15, ST33, and ST34 belonged to type 2a, a subtype of P1 type 2.

Conclusions
In Japan, prevalence of macrolide-resistant M. pneumoniae has decreased recently and rapidly. Other study groups have reported similar trends (8). However, in countries in Asia other than Japan, the resistance rate has remained high in China (3) and South Korea (1). In the European Union, the overall rate is low, but has varied by country. Macrolide-resistant M. pneumoniae was not detected in Sweden during 1996-2013 (9), and the rate has been consistently low in Germany (1.9%-3.6%) (10). Because of tight control of antimicrobial drug prescriptions, Sweden shows extremely low use of macrolides (11) compared with for more frequent use in countries in Asia (12), where excessive use of macrolides is likely to affect selection and increase of drug-resistant strains.  In Japan, macrolide consumption has decreased gradually after the 2011-2012 outbreak of macrolideresistant M. pneumoniae infections (http://amrcrc. ncgm.go.jp/surveillance/index.html), which may have contributed to the decrease in drug-resistant strains. In addition, the outbreak was followed by approval of tosufloxacin, a quinolone agent, for children with macrolide-resistant M. pneumoniae infection who fail to respond clinically to macrolides within 3 days. Approval of tosufloxacin as a treatment for these M. pneumoniae infections might have also contributed to the decrease in the macrolide resistance rate.
Our MLST results showed that predominant STs during 2018-2019 differed from those during 2016. M. pneumoniae could not be collected for our survey during 2017. This factor was a serious limitation because changes in STs might have occurred at that time. During 2018, strains identified as ST7 and ST33 were almost all susceptible and represented a major difference from previous findings. ST33, which contained a single-locus variant of the adk gene in ST15, was identified in Japan during 2018 and displaced ST14, the major ST among susceptible strains isolated during 2015-2016. The cause of ST replacement might have been acquisition of specific antibodies against epidemic M. pneumoniae in children and teenagers, which gave rise to a single-locus variant in its place. CC1 is a circular clonal complex that spread from ST3 at the center toward different STs showing a singlelocus variant. CC2 has extended from its original center at ST2 to include other STs with 1 or more mutated allele. STs belonging to CC2 seen to be more diverse than STs of CC1. Diversification has also been observed in type 2 of the P1 gene, corresponding to CC2 (13).
In conclusion, STs in M. pneumoniae isolates differed by area and year in Japan (1,7,14). Thus, MLST analysis is helpful in understanding worldwide trends among pathogenic M. pneumoniae.