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Antimicrobial resistance characteristics and phylogenetic relationships of pleuromutilin-resistant Enterococcus isolates from different environmental samples along a laying hen production chain.

Authors :
Lin, Cong
Feng, Yuxuan
Xie, Xianjun
Zhang, Haoyu
Wu, Jie
Zhu, Yixiao
Yu, Jing
Feng, Jingyi
Su, Wen
Lai, Shanming
Zhang, Anyun
Source :
Journal of Environmental Sciences (Elsevier). Mar2024, Vol. 137, p195-205. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance in the laying hen production industry has become a serious public health problem. The antimicrobial resistance and phylogenetic relationships of the common conditional pathogen Enterococcus along the laying hen production chain have not been systematically clarified. 105 Enterococcus isolates were obtained from 115 environmental samples (air, dust, feces, flies, sewage, and soil) collected along the laying hen production chain (breeding chicken, chick, young chicken, and commercial laying hen). These Enterococcus isolates exhibited resistance to some clinically relevant antibiotics, such as tetracycline (92.4%), streptomycin (92.4%), and erythromycin (91.4%), and all strains had multidrug resistance phenotypes. Whole genome sequencing characterized 29 acquired antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) that conferred resistance to 11 classes of antibiotics in 51 pleuromutilin-resistant Enterococcus isolates, and lsa(E) , which mediates resistance to pleuromutilins, always co-occurred with lnu(B). Alignments with the Mobile Genetic Elements database identified four transposons (Tn554, Tn558, Tn6261, and Tn6674) with several ARGs (erm(A), ant(9)-la, fex(A) , and optrA) that mediated resistance to many clinically important antibiotics. Moreover, we identified two new transposons that carried ARGs in the Tn554 family designated as Tn7508 and Tn7492. A complementary approach based on conventional multi-locus sequence typing and whole genome single nucleotide polymorphism analysis showed that phylogenetically related pleuromutilin-resistant Enterococcus isolates were widely distributed in various environments on different production farms. Our results indicate that environmental contamination by antimicrobial-resistant Enterococcus requires greater attention, and they highlight the risk of pleuromutilin-resistant Enterococcus and ARGs disseminating along the laying hen production chain, thereby warranting effective disinfection. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10010742
Volume :
137
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Environmental Sciences (Elsevier)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173700316
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jes.2023.01.012