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Transferable Resistance to Highest Priority Critically Important Antibiotics for Human Health in Escherichia coli Strains Obtained From Livestock Feces in Uruguay

25

Citations

19

References

2020

Year

Abstract

The aim of this work was to detect <i>Escherichia coli</i> isolates displaying resistance to oxyimino-cephalosporins, quinolones, and colistin in feces from livestock in Uruguay. During 2016-2019, fecal samples from 132 broiler and layer chicken flocks, 100 calves, and 50 pigs, were studied in Uruguay. Samples were cultured on MacConkey Agar plates supplemented with ciprofloxacin, ceftriaxone, or colistin. <i>E. coli</i> isolates were identified by mass spectrometry and antibiotic susceptibility testing was performed by disk diffusion agar method and colistin agar test. Antibiotic resistance genes were detected by polymerase chain reaction and sequencing. The most frequently detected resistance gene was <i>qnrB19</i>, recovered from 87 animals. Regarding plasmid-mediated quinolone resistance genes, <i>qnrS1</i> was the second in prevalence (23 animals) followed by <i>qnrE1</i>, found in 6 chickens and two calves. Regarding resistance to oxyimino-cephalosporins, 8 different β-lactamase genes were detected: <i>bla</i> <sub>CTX-M-8</sub> and <i>bla</i> <sub>CMY-2</sub> were found in 23 and 19 animals, respectively; next, <i>bla</i> <sub>CTX-M-2</sub> and <i>bla</i> <sub>SHV-12</sub> in 7 animals each, followed by <i>bla</i> <sub>CTX-M-14</sub> in 5, <i>bla</i> <sub>CTX-M-15</sub> and <i>bla</i> <sub>SHV2a</sub> in 2, and <i>bla</i> <sub>CTX-M-55</sub> in a single animal. Finally, the <i>mcr-1</i> gene was detected only in 8 pigs from a single farm, and in a chicken. Isolates carrying <i>bla</i> <sub>CMY-2</sub> and <i>bla</i> <sub>SHV-12</sub> were also found in these animals, including two isolates featuring the <i>bla</i> <sub>CMY-2</sub>/<i>mcr-1</i> genotype. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work in which the search for transferable resistance to highest priority critically important antibiotics for human health is carried out in chickens and pigs chains of production animals in Uruguay.

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