beta-Lactam resistance levels vary among methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) clinical isolates, mediated by chromosomal mutations and exogenous resistance gene mecA. However, MRSA resistance mechanisms are incompletely understood. A P440L mutation in the RNA polymerase beta' subunit (RpoC) in slow-vancomycin- intermediate S. aureus (sVISA) strain V6-5 is associated with conversion of heterogeneous VISA (hVISA) to sVISA. In this study, we found a V6-5-derivative strain (L4) with significantly decreased MICs to oxacillin (OX) and vancomycin. Whole-genome sequencing revealed that L4 has nonsense mutations in two genes, relQ, encoding (p) ppGpp synthetase, an alarmone of the stringent response, and a gene of unknown function. relQ deletion in the hVISA strain Mu3 did not affect OX MIC. However, introducing nonsense mutation of the unknown gene into Mu3 decreased OX MIC, whereas wild-type gene recovered high-level resistance. Thus, mutation of this unknown gene (ehoM) decreased beta-lactam resistance in Mu3 and L4. Presence of relQ in a multicopy plasmid restored high-level resistance in strain L4 but not in the ehoM mutant Mu3 strain, indicating a genetic interaction between ehoM and relQ depending on the L4 genetic background. While mupirocin (a stringent response inducer) can increase the beta-lactam resistance of MRSA, mupirocin supplementation in an ehoM deletion mutant of N315 did not elevate resistance. ehoM expression in N315 was induced by mupirocin, and the relative amount of ehoM transcript in Mu3 was higher than in N315 induced by the stringent response. Our findings indicate that ehoM plays an essential role in high-level beta-lactam resistance in MRSA via the stringent response.