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Distribution of Antibiotic Resistance Genes in the Saliva of Healthy Omnivores, Ovo-Lacto-Vegetarians, and Vegans

Authors :
Danilo Ercolini
Raffaella Di Cagno
Andrea Osimani
Silvia Turroni
Francesca De Filippis
Camilla Lazzi
Stefano Tavoletti
Lucia Aquilanti
Vesna Milanović
Ilario Ferrocino
Francesca Clementi
Cristiana Garofalo
Nicoletta Pellegrini
Milanovic V.
Aquilanti L.
Tavoletti S.
Garofalo C.
Osimani A.
De Filippis F.
Ercolini D.
Ferrocino I.
Di Cagno R.
Turroni S.
Lazzi C.
Pellegrini N.
Clementi F.
Milanovic, V.
Aquilanti, L.
Tavoletti, S.
Garofalo, C.
Osimani, A.
De Filippis, F.
Ercolini, D.
Ferrocino, I.
Di Cagno, R.
Turroni, S.
Lazzi, C.
Pellegrini, N.
Clementi, F.
Source :
Genes, Vol 11, Iss 1088, p 1088 (2020), Genes, Volume 11, Issue 9
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

Food consumption allows the entrance of bacteria and their antibiotic resistance (AR) genes into the human oral cavity. To date, very few studies have examined the influence of diet on the composition of the salivary microbiota, and even fewer investigations have specifically aimed to assess the impact of different long-term diets on the salivary resistome. In this study, the saliva of 144 healthy omnivores, ovo-lacto-vegetarians, and vegans were screened by nested PCR for the occurrence of 12 genes conferring resistance to tetracyclines, macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B, vancomycin, and &beta<br />lactams. The tet(W), tet(M), and erm(B) genes occurred with the highest frequencies. Overall, no effect of diet on AR gene distribution was seen. Some differences emerged at the recruiting site level, such as the higher frequency of erm(C) in the saliva of the ovo-lacto-vegetarians and omnivores from Bologna and Turin, respectively, and the higher occurrence of tet(K) in the saliva of the omnivores from Bologna. A correlation of the intake of milk and cheese with the abundance of tet(K) and erm(C) genes was seen. Finally, when the occurrence of the 12 AR genes was evaluated along with geographical location, age, and sex as sources of variability, high similarity among the 144 volunteers was seen.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20734425
Volume :
11
Issue :
1088
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genes
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f5487d194c49a4823c9f9c8179a78fa3