Diversity of antimicrobial resistance genes and class-1-integrons in phylogenetically related porcine and human Escherichia coli

被引:14
作者
Hoelzel, Christina Susanne [1 ]
Harms, Katrin Susanne [1 ]
Bauer, Johann [1 ]
Bauer-Unkauf, Ilse [2 ]
Hoermansdorfer, Stefan [3 ]
Kaempf, Peter [3 ]
Moelle, Gabriele [2 ]
Oehme, Cornelia [1 ]
Preikschat, Petra [2 ]
Schwaiger, Karin [1 ]
机构
[1] Tech Univ Munich, D-85354 Freising Weihenstephan, Germany
[2] Bavarian Hlth & Food Safety Author LGL, D-91058 Erlangen, Germany
[3] Bavarian Hlth & Food Safety Author LGL, D-85764 Oberschleissheim, Germany
关键词
Escherichia coli; Antimicrobial resistance gene profile; Integron; Phylogenetic group; Pig; Human; LIQUID PIG MANURE; ENTERICA SEROVAR TYPHIMURIUM; ANTIBIOTIC-RESISTANCE; VIRULENCE GENES; STRAINS; TETRACYCLINE; ORIGIN; POPULATIONS; PLASMIDS; PATTERNS;
D O I
10.1016/j.vetmic.2012.06.010
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Antimicrobial resistant bacteria and resistance genes can be transferred between the microbial flora of humans and animals. To assess the dimension of this risk, we compared the phylogenetic ancestry of human and porcine tetracycline-insusceptible Escherichia coli. Further, we compared the resistance gene profiles (tetA/tetB/tetC/tetD/tetM/sulI/sulII/sulIII/strA-strB/addA) and the prevalence of class-1-integrons in isolates of identical and different phylogroups by endpoint-PCR. This is the first genotypic comparison of antimicrobial resistance in E. coli from humans and animals which allows for the phylogenetic ancestry of the isolates. E. coli isolates from diseased humans belonged regularly to phylogroup B2 (24.3%) or D (30.9%) and were rarely not typeable (7.2%); by contrast, isolates from pig manure were regularly not typeable (46.7%) and rarely grouped into phylogroup B2 (2.2%) or D (2.9%). Class-1-integrons were detected in 40.8% of clinical (n = 152), in 9.5% of community-derived (n = 21) and in 10.9% of porcine (n = 137) E. coli. The prevalence of still (42.4%/16.0%) in phylogroup A and of tetA, tetB and still in phylogroup B1 differed significantly between human clinical and porcine strains. Human clinical isolates (except B2-isolates) carried significantly more different resistance genes per strain, compared to porcine or community-derived isolates. ERIC-PCR-analysis of B2- (and D-) isolates with identical genetic profiles revealed that only a minor part was clonally related. The dominant resistance gene profiles differed depending on phylogroup and source. Human and porcine isolates do not exceedingly share their genes, and might rapidly adapt their resistance gene equipment to meet the requirements of a new environment. The study underlines that resistance gene transfer between human and porcine isolates is limited, even in phylogenetically related isolates. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:403 / 412
页数:10
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