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. 2018 Jul 13;10(8):1858–1874. doi: 10.1093/gbe/evy145

Table 2.

Phenotypic and Genotypic Antibiotic Susceptibility Profiles of Newly Isolated Strains

Genotypic Resistance mutations
Name Previously treated Phenotypic resistance rpoB katG PinhA pncA Other
NRC1 No Susceptible wt wt wt wt
NRC2 No Isoniazid (Low), streptomycin wt wt c−15t wt gyrA/gyrB: wt
NRC3 Yes Streptomycin wt wt wt wt gyrA/gyrB: wt
NRC4 No Susceptible wt wt wt wt
NRC5 No Susceptible wt wt wt wt
NRC6 Unknown Isoniazid (High), rifampicin, ethionamide, streptomycin, para-aminosalicylic acid S450(531)L S315T wt wt
  • ethA G124D

  • ethR: wt

  • gyrA/gyrB: wt

  • rrs1400*: wt

  • embB M306: wt

NRC7 No Isoniazid (High), rifampicin, pyrazinamide, ethambutol, ethionamide, streptomycin, kanamycin, para-aminosalicylic acid S450(531)L S315T wt S104R
  • embB M306I

  • ethA: G124D

  • ethR: wt

  • gyrA/gyrB: wt

  • rrs1400*: wt

Genotypic antibiotic susceptibility was tested for first-line drugs isoniazid (katG, PinhA, promoter of inhA), rifampicin (rpoB), pyrazinamide (pncA) (Barrera et al. 2008; WHO 2014), by different PCRs and Sanger-sequencing as described previously (Brossier et al. 2017). When an isolate was resistant to any of these antituberculosis drugs, second-line drugs ethionamide (ethA, ethR); aminoglycosides (*, rrs region 1400, eis promoter), fluoroquinolones (gyrA/gyrB) and para-aminosalicylic acid were tested. Genotypic susceptibility is indicated as “wt” (wild-type), or the resulting amino acid (upper case), or base (lower case) changes. First letter depicts amino acid in reference sequence; second letter depicts detected amino acid/base; rpoB positions between brackets represent positions in older nomenclature system; Position is depicted as number in subscript. N.P., not performed.