Conjugation-Mediated Transfer of Antibiotic-Resistance Plasmids Between Enterobacteriaceae in the Digestive Tract of Blaberus craniifer (Blattodea: Blaberidae). - Related Documents




#
Rank
Similarity
Title + Abs.
Year
PMID
012345
356401.0000Conjugation-Mediated Transfer of Antibiotic-Resistance Plasmids Between Enterobacteriaceae in the Digestive Tract of Blaberus craniifer (Blattodea: Blaberidae). Cockroaches, insects of the order Blattodea, seem to play a crucial role in the possible conjugation-mediated genetic exchanges that occur among bacteria that harbor in the cockroach intestinal tract. The gut of these insects can be thought of as an effective in vivo model for the natural transfer of antimicrobial resistance plasmids among bacteria. In our study, we evaluated the conjugation-mediated horizontal transfer of resistance genes between Escherichia coli and other microorganisms of the same Enterobacteriaceae family within the intestinal tract of Blaberus craniifer Burmeister, 1838 (Blattodea: Blaberidae). Different in vivo mating experiments were performed using E. coli RP4 harboring the RP4 plasmid carrying ampicillin, kanamycin, and tetracycline resistance genes as the donor and E. coli K12 resistant to nalidixic acid or Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis IMM39 resistant to streptomycin as the recipients. The RP4 plasmid was successfully transferred to both recipients, producing E. coli K12-RP4 and S. Enteritidis IMM39-RP4 transconjugants. Conjugation frequencies in vivo were similar to those previously observed in vitro. The transfer of the RP4 plasmid in all transconjugants was confirmed by small-scale plasmid isolation and agar gel electrophoresis, suggesting that the intestinal tract of cockroaches is an effective in vivo model for natural gene transfer. Our results confirm that cockroaches allow for the exchange of antimicrobial resistance plasmids among bacteria and may represent a potential reservoir for the dissemination of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in different environments. These findings are particularly significant to human health in the context of health care settings such as hospitals.201626875189
490210.9994Conjugative transfer of plasmid-located antibiotic resistance genes within the gastrointestinal tract of lesser mealworm larvae, Alphitobius diaperinus (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae). The frequency of conjugative transfer of antimicrobial resistance plasmids between bacteria within the gastrointestinal tract of lesser mealworm larvae, a prevalent pest in poultry production facilities, was determined. Lesser mealworm larvae were exposed to a negative bacterial control, a donor Salmonella enterica serotype Newport strain, a recipient Escherichia coli, or both donor and recipient to examine horizontal gene transfer of plasmids. Horizontal gene transfer was validated post external disinfection, via a combination of selective culturing, testing of indole production by spot test, characterization of incompatibility plasmids by polymerase chain reaction, and profiling antibiotic susceptibility by a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) assay. Transconjugants were produced in all larvae exposed to both donor and recipient bacteria at frequencies comparable to control in vitro filter mating conjugation studies run concurrently. Transconjugants displayed resistance to seven antibiotics in our MIC panel and, when characterized for incompatibility plasmids, were positive for the N replicon and negative for the A/C replicon. The transconjugants did not display resistance to expanded-spectrum cephalosporins, which were associated with the A/C plasmid. This study demonstrates that lesser mealworm larvae, which infest poultry litter, are capable of supporting the horizontal transfer of antibiotic resistance genes and that this exchange can occur within their gastrointestinal tract and between different species of bacteria under laboratory conditions. This information is essential to science-based risk assessments of industrial antibiotic usage and its impact on animal and human health.200919425825
490420.9994Mobility of β-Lactam Resistance Under Bacterial Co-infection and Ampicillin Treatment in a Mouse Model. Ingestion of food- or waterborne antibiotic-resistant bacteria may lead to the dissemination of antibiotic-resistance genes in the gut microbiota and the development of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infection, a significant threat to animal and public health. Food or water may be contaminated with multiple resistant bacteria, but animal models on gene transfer were mainly based on single-strain infections. In this study, we investigated the mobility of β-lactam resistance following infection with single- versus multi-strain of resistant bacteria under ampicillin treatment. We characterized three bacterial strains isolated from food-animal production systems, Escherichia coli O80:H26 and Salmonella enterica serovars Bredeney and Heidelberg. Each strain carries at least one conjugative plasmid that encodes a β-lactamase. We orally infected mice with each or all three bacterial strain(s) in the presence or absence of ampicillin treatment. We assessed plasmid transfer from the three donor bacteria to an introduced E. coli CV601gfp recipient in the mouse gut, and evaluated the impacts of the bacterial infection on gut microbiota and gut health. In the absence of ampicillin treatment, none of the donor or recipient bacteria established in the normal gut microbiota and plasmid transfer was not detected. In contrast, the ampicillin treatment disrupted the gut microbiota and enabled S. Bredeney and Heidelberg to colonize and transfer their plasmids to the E. coli CV601gfp recipient. E. coli O80:H26 on its own failed to colonize the mouse gut. However, during co-infection with the two Salmonella strains, E. coli O80:H26 colonized and transferred its plasmid to the E. coli CV601gfp recipient and a residential E. coli O2:H6 strain. The co-infection significantly increased plasmid transfer frequency, enhanced Proteobacteria expansion and resulted in inflammation in the mouse gut. Our findings suggest that single-strain infection models for evaluating in vivo gene transfer may underrepresent the consequences of multi-strain infections following the consumption of heavily contaminated food or water.202032733428
460530.9994Self-transmissible multidrug resistance plasmids in Escherichia coli of the normal intestinal flora of healthy swine. The resistance genes and their surroundings on three self-transmissible plasmids found in Escherichia coli of the enteric normal flora of healthy pigs have been characterized. The resistance elements found are similar to those commonly found in clinical isolates, like the transposon Tn1721 including the Tet A tetracycline resistance determinant, Tn10 with the Tet B determinant, Tn21 including a class 1 integron with the aadA1a cassette inserted, sulII encoding sulfonamide resistance, and the strA-strB genes responsible for streptomycin resistance. The plasmids were able to mobilize into various recipients, including swine pathogens, zoonotic bacteria, and commensals when conjugation experiments were carried out. Transfer of plasmids did not require optimal conditions concerning nutrition and temperature as plasmids were transferred in 0.9% saline at room temperature, suggesting that in vivo transfer might be possible. This study shows that transferable resistance elements appearing in normal flora bacteria from animals are similar to those commonly found in clinical isolates of human origin. The results indicate a probable communication between pathogens and the normal flora with respect to exchange of resistance factors.200111442346
358140.9994Monitoring horizontal antibiotic resistance gene transfer in a colonic fermentation model. The human microbiota is suggested to be a reservoir of antibiotic resistance (ABR) genes, which are exchangeable between transient colonizers and residing bacteria. In this study, the transfer of ABR genes from Enterococcus faecalis to Listeria monocytogenes and to commensal bacteria of the human gut microbiota was demonstrated in a colonic fermentation model. In the first fermentation, an E. faecalis donor harboring the marked 50-kb conjugative plasmid pRE25(*) and a chromosomal marker was co-immobilized with L. monocytogenes and infant feces. In this complex environment, the transfer of pRE25(*) to L. monocytogenes was observed. In a second fermentation, only the E. faecalis donor and feces were co-immobilized. Enumeration of pRE25(*) and the donor strain by quantitative PCR revealed an increasing ratio of pRE25(*) to the donor throughout the 16-day fermentation, indicating the transfer of pRE25(*) . An Enterococcus avium transconjugant was isolated, demonstrating that ABR gene transfer to gut commensals occurred. Moreover, pRE25(*) was still functional in both the E. avium and the L. monocytogenes transconjugant and transmittable to other genera in filter mating experiments. Our study reveals that the transfer of a multiresistance plasmid to commensal bacteria in the presence of competing fecal microbiota occurs in a colonic model, suggesting that commensal bacteria contribute to the increasing prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.201121658089
997450.9994Role of Plasmids in Co-Selection of Antimicrobial Resistances Among Escherichia coli Isolated from Pigs. Co-selection is thought to occur when resistance genes are located on the same mobile genetic element. However, this mechanism is currently poorly understood. In this study, complete circular plasmids from swine-derived Escherichia coli were sequenced with short and long reads to confirm that resistance genes involved in co-resistance were co-transferred by the same plasmid. Conjugative transfer tests were performed, and multiple resistance genes were transmitted. The genes possessed by the donor, transconjugant, and plasmid of the donor were highly similar. In addition, the sequences of the plasmid of the donor and the plasmid of the transconjugant were almost identical. Resistance genes associated with statistically significant combinations of antimicrobial use and resistance were co-transmitted by the same plasmid. These results suggest that resistance genes may be involved in co-selection by their transfer between bacteria on the same plasmid.202337540099
379160.9994Horizontal transfer of Shiga toxin and antibiotic resistance genes among Escherichia coli strains in house fly (Diptera: Muscidae) gut. Whether the house fly, Musca domestica L., gut is a permissive environment for horizontal transfer of antibiotic resistance and virulence genes between strains of Escherichia coli is not known. House flies were immobilized and force fed suspensions of defined, donor strains of E. coli containing chloramphenicol resistance genes on a plasmid, or lysogenic, bacteriophage-born Shiga toxin gene stx1 (bacteriophage H-19B::Ap1). Recipient strains were E. coli lacking these mobile elements and genes but having rifampicin as a selectable marker. Plasmid transfer occurred at rates of 10(-2) per donor cell in the fly midgut and 10(-3) in the fly crop after 1 h of incubation postfeeding. Bacteriophage transfer rate was approximately 10(-6) per donor cell without induction, but induction with mitomycin C increased rates of transfer to 10(-2) per donor cell. These findings show that genes encoding antibiotic resistance or toxins will transfer horizontally among bacteria in the house fly gut via plasmid transfer or phage transduction. The house fly gut may provide a favorable environment for the evolution and emergence of pathogenic bacterial strains through acquisition of antibiotic resistance genes or virulence factors.200616619613
997570.9994Detection of Horizontal Gene Transfer Mediated by Natural Conjugative Plasmids in E. coli. Conjugation represents one of the main mechanisms facilitating horizontal gene transfer in Gram-negative bacteria. This work describes methods for the study of the mobilization of naturally occurring conjugative plasmids, using two naturally-occurring plasmids as an example. These protocols rely on the differential presence of selectable markers in donor, recipient, and conjugative plasmid. Specifically, the methods described include 1) the identification of natural conjugative plasmids, 2) the quantification of conjugation rates in solid culture, and 3) the diagnostic detection of the antibiotic resistance genes and plasmid replicon types in transconjugant recipients by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The protocols described here have been developed in the context of studying the evolutionary ecology of horizontal gene transfer, to screen for the presence of conjugative plasmids carrying antibiotic-resistance genes in bacteria found in the environment. The efficient transfer of conjugative plasmids observed in these experiments in culture highlights the biological relevance of conjugation as a mechanism promoting horizontal gene transfer in general and the spread of antibiotic resistance in particular.202337036197
490380.9994Tetracycline resistance gene transfer from Escherichia coli donors to Salmonella Heidelberg in chickens is impacted by the genetic context of donors. Chicken ceca are a rich source of bacteria, including zoonotic pathogens such as Salmonella enterica. The microbiota includes strains/species carrying antimicrobial resistance genes and horizontal transfer of resistance determinants between species may increase the risk to public health and farming systems. Possible sources of these antimicrobial resistance donors - the eggshell carrying bacteria from the hen vertically transmitted to the offspring, or the barn environment where chicks are hatched and raised - has been little explored. In this study, we used Salmonella enterica serovar Heidelberg to evaluate if layer chicks raised in different environments (using combinations of sterilized or non-sterile eggs placed in sterilized isolation chambers or non-sterile rooms) acquired transferable tetracycline resistance genes from surrounding bacteria, especially Escherichia coli. Two-day old chicks were challenged with an antibiotic-susceptible S. Heidelberg strain SH2813(nal)(R) and Salmonella recovered from the cecum of birds at different timepoints to test the in vivo acquisition of tetracycline resistance. Tetracycline-resistant E. coli isolates recovered from birds from the in vivo experiment were used to test the in vitro transfer of tetracycline resistance genes from E. coli to Salmonella. Even though Salmonella SH2813(nal)(R) colonized the 2-day old chicks after oral challenge, tetracycline-resistant Salmonella transconjugants were not recovered, as previously observed. In vitro experiments provided similar results. We discuss several hypotheses that might explain the absence of transconjugants in vitro and in vivo, despite the presence of diverse plasmids in the recovered E. coli. The factors that can inhibit/promote antimicrobial resistance transfers to Salmonella for different plasmid types need further exploration.202439581077
336990.9994On sulfonamide resistance, sul genes, class 1 integrons and their horizontal transfer in Escherichia coli. Class 1 integrons (Int1) contribute to antibiotic multiresistance in Gram-negative bacteria. Being frequently carried by conjugative plasmids, their spread would depend to some extent on their horizontal transfer to other bacteria. This was the main issue that was addressed in this work: the analysis of Int1 lateral transfer in the presence of different antibiotic pressures. Strains from a previously obtained collection of Escherichia coli K12 carrying natural Int1(+) conjugative plasmids were employed as Int1 donors in conjugation experiments. Two recipient strains were used: an E. coli K12 and an uropathogenic E. coli isolate. The four antibiotics employed to select transconjugants in LB solid medium were ampicillin, trimethoprim, sulfamethoxazole, and co-trimoxazole. For this purpose, adequate final concentrations of the three last antibiotics had to be determined. Abundant transconjugants resulted from the mating experiments and appeared in most -but not all-selective plates. In those supplemented with sulfamethoxazole or co-trimoxazole, transconjugants grew or not depending on the genetic context of the recipient strain and on the type of gene conferring sulfonamide resistance (sul1 or sul2) carried by the Int1(+) plasmid. The horizontal transfer of a recombinant plasmid bearing an Int1 was also assayed by transformation and these experiments provided further information on the viability of the Int1(+) clones. Overall, results point to the existence of constraints for the lateral transfer of Int1 among E. coli bacteria, which are particularly evidenced under the antibiotic pressure of sulfamethoxazole or of its combined formula co-trimoxazole.201931247256
4613100.9994Glycopeptide-resistance transferability from vancomycin-resistant enterococci of human and animal source to Listeria spp. AIMS: The glycopeptide-resistance transferability from vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) of clinical and animal origin to different species of Listeria was investigated. METHODS AND RESULTS: Of 36 matings, performed on membrane filter, the glycopeptide resistance was successfully transferred in six attempts, five with donors of animal origin and only one with donors from clinical source. The acquired glycopeptide resistance in Listeria transconjugants was confirmed by the presence of the conjugative plasmid band and by the amplification of the 732-bp fragment of vanA gene in transferred plasmids. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the lower number of bacteria used in this study, the source of enterococci influenced the outcome of mating. Moreover transferred VanA plasmid induced a different expression in Listeria transconjugants, suggesting that gene expression might be influenced by species affiliation of recipients. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: Our data strengthen the opinion that enterococci are an important source of resistance genes for Listeria via the transfer of movable genetic elements. As these strains are commonly found in the same habitats, a horizontal spread of glycopeptide resistance in Listeria spp. could be possible.200415548299
4612110.9993Assessment of tetracycline and erythromycin resistance transfer during sausage fermentation by culture-dependent and -independent methods. The food chain is considered one of the main routes of antibiotic resistance diffusion between animal and human population. The resistance to antimicrobial agents among enterococci could be related to the efficient exchange of transferable genetic elements. In this study a sausage model was used to evaluate the persistence of antibiotic resistant enterococci during meat fermentation and to assess horizontal gene transfer among bacteria involved in meat fermentation. Enterococcus faecalis OG1rf harbouring either pCF10 or pAMβ1 plasmid was used as donor strain. The analysis of population dynamics during fermentation confirmed that the human isolate E. faecalis OG1rf was able to colonize the meat ecosystem with similar growth kinetics to that of food origin enterococci and to transfer the mobile genetic elements coding for tetracycline and erythromycin resistances. Transconjugant strains were detected after only two days of fermentation and increased their numbers during ripening even in the absence of selective antibiotic pressure. By means of culture-dependent and -independent molecular techniques, transconjugant strains carrying both tetracycline and erythromycin resistance genes were identified in enterococci, pediococci, lactobacilli and staphylococci groups. Our results suggest that the sausage model provides a suitable environment for horizontal transfer of conjugative plasmids and antibiotic resistance genes among food microbiota.201222365347
3580120.9993Transfer of plasmid-mediated resistance to tetracycline in pathogenic bacteria from fish and aquaculture environments. The transferability of a large plasmid that harbors a tetracycline resistance gene tet(S), to fish and human pathogens was assessed using electrotransformation and conjugation. The plasmid, originally isolated from fish intestinal Lactococcus lactis ssp. lactis KYA-7, has potent antagonistic activity against the selected recipients (Lactococcus garvieae and Listeria monocytogenes), preventing conjugation. Therefore the tetracycline resistance determinant was transferred via electroporation to L. garvieae. A transformant clone was used as the donor in conjugation experiments with three different L. monocytogenes strains. To our knowledge, this is the first study showing the transfer of an antibiotic resistance plasmid from fish-associated lactic bacteria to L. monocytogenes, even if the donor L. garvieae was not the original host of the tetracycline resistance but experimentally created by electroporation. These results demonstrate that the antibiotic resistance genes in the fish intestinal bacteria have the potential to spread both to fish and human pathogens, posing a risk to aquaculture and consumer safety.200919236483
3365130.9993Effect of donor-recipient relatedness on the plasmid conjugation frequency: a meta-analysis. BACKGROUND: Conjugation plays a major role in the transmission of plasmids encoding antibiotic resistance genes in both clinical and general settings. The conjugation efficiency is influenced by many biotic and abiotic factors, one of which is the taxonomic relatedness between donor and recipient bacteria. A comprehensive overview of the influence of donor-recipient relatedness on conjugation is still lacking, but such an overview is important to quantitatively assess the risk of plasmid transfer and the effect of interventions which limit the spread of antibiotic resistance, and to obtain parameter values for conjugation in mathematical models. Therefore, we performed a meta-analysis on reported conjugation frequencies from Escherichia coli donors to various recipient species. RESULTS: Thirty-two studies reporting 313 conjugation frequencies for liquid broth matings and 270 conjugation frequencies for filter matings were included in our meta-analysis. The reported conjugation frequencies varied over 11 orders of magnitude. Decreasing taxonomic relatedness between donor and recipient bacteria, when adjusted for confounding factors, was associated with a lower conjugation frequency in liquid matings. The mean conjugation frequency for bacteria of the same order, the same class, and other classes was 10, 20, and 789 times lower than the mean conjugation frequency within the same species, respectively. This association between relatedness and conjugation frequency was not found for filter matings. The conjugation frequency was furthermore found to be influenced by temperature in both types of mating experiments, and in addition by plasmid incompatibility group in liquid matings, and by recipient origin and mating time in filter matings. CONCLUSIONS: In our meta-analysis, taxonomic relatedness is limiting conjugation in liquid matings, but not in filter matings, suggesting that taxonomic relatedness is not a limiting factor for conjugation in environments where bacteria are fixed in space.202032456625
3565140.9993Conjugative RP4 Plasmid-Mediated Transfer of Antibiotic Resistance Genes to Commensal and Multidrug-Resistant Enteric Bacteria In Vitro. Many antibiotic-resistant bacteria carry resistance genes on conjugative plasmids that are transferable to commensals and pathogens. We determined the ability of multiple enteric bacteria to acquire and retransfer a broad-host-range plasmid RP4. We used human-derived commensal Escherichia coli LM715-1 carrying a chromosomal red fluorescent protein gene and green fluorescent protein (GFP)-labeled broad-host-range RP4 plasmid with ampR, tetR, and kanR in in vitro matings to rifampicin-resistant recipients, including Escherichia coli MG1655, Dec5α, Vibrio cholerae, Pseudomonas putida, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Citrobacter rodentium, and Salmonella Typhimurium. Transconjugants were quantified on selective media and confirmed using fluorescence microscopy and PCR for the GFP gene. The plasmid was transferred from E. coli LM715-1 to all tested recipients except P. aeruginosa. Transfer frequencies differed between specific donor-recipient pairings (10(-2) to 10(-8)). Secondary retransfer of plasmid from transconjugants to E. coli LM715-1 occurred at frequencies from 10(-2) to 10(-7). A serial passage plasmid persistence assay showed plasmid loss over time in the absence of antibiotics, indicating that the plasmid imposed a fitness cost to its host, although some plasmid-bearing cells persisted for at least ten transfers. Thus, the RP4 plasmid can transfer to multiple clinically relevant bacterial species without antibiotic selection pressure.202336677486
3367150.9993Horizontal transmission of antimicrobial resistance genes from E. coli to Serratia spp. in minced meat using a gfp tagged plasmid. The transmission of antimicrobial resistance genes from enteric bacteria from the animal reservoir to indigenous bacteria in meat is a serious concern, as it can contribute to human exposure to antimicrobial resistance genes. The aim of this study was to investigate plasmid-mediated horizontal transfer of antimicrobial resistance genes from Escherichia coli to indigenous environmental bacteria in minced pork stored at 10 and 37 °C. E. coli MG1555 containing a gfp-tagged plasmid carrying tetracycline, kanamycin and streptomycin resistance genes was used as the donor with the indigenous bacteria in minced pork acting as potential recipients. The results demonstrated that enteric members of the pork meat microbiota were able to receive gfp-plasmids from the E. coli donor strain at both 10 and 37 °C. The majority of transconjugants were identified as Serratia spp. through sequencing of their 16S rRNA genes. This indicates that environmental Serratia spp. and other Enterobacteriaceae may play a role as carrier of antimicrobial resistance genes through the meat production chain to the consumer.202032799172
3952160.9993Conjugation Dynamics of Self-Transmissible and Mobilisable Plasmids into E. coli O157:H7 on Arabidopsis thaliana Rosettes. Many antibiotic resistance genes present in human pathogenic bacteria are believed to originate from environmental bacteria. Conjugation of antibiotic resistance conferring plasmids is considered to be one of the major reasons for the increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistances. A hotspot for plasmid-based horizontal gene transfer is the phyllosphere, i.e., the surfaces of aboveground plant parts. Bacteria in the phyllosphere might serve as intermediate hosts with transfer capability to human pathogenic bacteria. In this study, the exchange of mobilisable and self-transmissible plasmids via conjugation was evaluated. The conjugation from the laboratory strain Escherichia coli S17-1, the model phyllosphere coloniser Pantoea eucalypti 299R, and the model pathogen E. coli O157:H7 to the recipient strain E. coli O157:H7::MRE103 (EcO157:H7red) in the phyllosphere of Arabidopsis thaliana was determined. The results suggest that short-term occurrence of a competent donor is sufficient to fix plasmids in a recipient population of E. coli O157:H7red. The spread of self-transmissible plasmids was limited after initial steep increases of transconjugants that contributed up to 10% of the total recipient population. The here-presented data of plasmid transfer will be important for future modelling approaches to estimate environmental spread of antibiotic resistance in agricultural production environments.202134438978
4606170.9993Bacteriophages Isolated from Chicken Meat and the Horizontal Transfer of Antimicrobial Resistance Genes. Antimicrobial resistance in microbes poses a global and increasing threat to public health. The horizontal transfer of antimicrobial resistance genes was thought to be due largely to conjugative plasmids or transposons, with only a minor part being played by transduction through bacteriophages. However, whole-genome sequencing has recently shown that the latter mechanism could be highly important in the exchange of antimicrobial resistance genes between microorganisms and environments. The transfer of antimicrobial resistance genes by phages could underlie the origin of resistant bacteria found in food. We show that chicken meat carries a number of phages capable of transferring antimicrobial resistance. Of 243 phages randomly isolated from chicken meat, about a quarter (24.7%) were able to transduce resistance to one or more of the five antimicrobials tested into Escherichia coli ATCC 13706 (DSM 12242). Resistance to kanamycin was transduced the most often, followed by that to chloramphenicol, with four phages transducing tetracycline resistance and three transducing ampicillin resistance. Phages able to transduce antimicrobial resistance were isolated from 44% of the samples of chicken meat that we tested. The statistically significant (P = 0.01) relationship between the presence of phages transducing kanamycin resistance and E. coli isolates resistant to this antibiotic suggests that transduction may be an important mechanism for transferring kanamycin resistance to E. coli. It appears that the transduction of resistance to certain antimicrobials, e.g., kanamycin, not only is widely distributed in E. coli isolates found on meat but also could represent a major mechanism for resistance transfer. The result is of high importance for animal and human health.201525934615
3368180.9993Horizontal Transfer of Plasmid-Mediated Cephalosporin Resistance Genes in the Intestine of Houseflies (Musca domestica). Houseflies are a mechanical vector for various types of bacteria, including antimicrobial-resistant bacteria (ARB). If the intestine of houseflies is a suitable site for the transfer of antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs), houseflies could also serve as a biological vector for ARB. To clarify whether cephalosporin resistance genes are transferred efficiently in the housefly intestine, we compared with conjugation experiments in vivo (in the intestine) and in vitro by using Escherichia coli with eight combinations of four donor and two recipient strains harboring plasmid-mediated cephalosporin resistance genes and chromosomal-encoded rifampicin resistance genes, respectively. In the in vivo conjugation experiment, houseflies ingested donor strains for 6 hr and then recipient strains for 3 hr, and 24 hr later, the houseflies were surface sterilized and analyzed. In vitro conjugation experiments were conducted using the broth-mating method. In 3/8 combinations, the in vitro transfer frequency (Transconjugants/Donor) was ≥1.3 × 10(-4); the in vivo transfer rates of cephalosporin resistance genes ranged from 2.0 × 10(-4) to 5.7 × 10(-5). Moreover, cephalosporin resistance genes were transferred to other species of enteric bacteria of houseflies such as Achromobacter sp. and Pseudomonas fluorescens. These results suggest that houseflies are not only a mechanical vector for ARB but also a biological vector for the occurrence of new ARB through the horizontal transfer of ARGs in their intestine.201626683492
3356190.9993Conjugative multiple-antibiotic resistance plasmids in Escherichia coli isolated from environmental waters contaminated by human faecal wastes. AIMS: To better understand the involvement of faecal contamination in the dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes, we investigated the genetic supports of resistances in nine multi-resistant Escherichia coli strains originating from human faecal contamination, and isolated from three different aquatic environments used for producing drinking water. METHODS AND RESULTS: Seven strains harboured at least one large plasmid that we have characterized (size, antibiotic resistance patterns, incompatibility group, capacity of autotransfer, presence of integron). Most of these plasmids were conjugative and carried numerous resistances. One of the plasmids studied, belonging to the IncP incompatibility group, was able to transfer by conjugation to Pseudomonas fluorescens and Aeromonas sp. Only two of the plasmids we studied carried class 1 and/or 2 integron(s). CONCLUSIONS: Conjugative plasmids isolated from multi-resistant E. coli strains explained most of the resistances of their host strains and probably contribute to the spread of antibiotic resistance genes coming from human faecal contamination. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: These results highlight the key role played by plasmids in the multi-resistance phenotype of faecal bacteria and the diversity of these genetic structures. Contaminated water, especially accidentally contaminated drinking water, could be a path back to humans for these plasmids.201525387599