Answer:
All of the options are true for a MRSA infection.
Step-by-step explanation:
Staphylococcus aureus is one of the most frequent pathogens causing hospital and community infections. S. aureus can become very easy methicillin resistant (called MRSA isolates) and others beta-lactam antibiotics (are the ones widely used to treat infections) and usually can be resistant to other class of antibiotics, become a very strong bacteria making treatment options very limited. MRSA isolates can rapidly transfer the methicillin resistance to other species of Staphylococcus and some other bacteria. Also S. aureus can acquire other antibiotic resistant genes making a deadly bacterium for its strong resistance. It is in search how the bacterium acquire this antibiotics resistance ( and other virulence factors genes) and the mechanism involve to develop new drugs to treat MRSA infections with the hope that canĀ“t develop resistance to this new drugs.