In an outbreak of hospital infection caused by Klebsiella aerogenes type K-16 isolates over a 3-month period carried, apparently unaltered, a cryptic 90-Megadalton (Md) plasmid (unclassified) and a multiple-resistance 65-Md plasmid of IncM. The IncM plasmid, identified in environmentally related strains of Citrobacter koseri and Escherichia coli, showed minor variations from that in the klebsiella vector. The IncM plasmids, as well as all wild host strains cured of the IncM plasmids, carried a transposable DNA sequence, encoding trimethoprim and, in every case but one, streptomycin resistance. This transposon appeared identical with Tn7, previously identified in unrelated plasmids in bacteria from different environments. © 1979.