Surveillance of Enterococcus spp. reveals distinct species and antimicrobial resistance diversity across a One-Health continuum

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-61002-5

Langue de publication
Anglais
Date
2020-03-03
Type
Article
Auteur(s)
  • Zaheer, Rahat
  • Cook, Shaun R.
  • Barbieri, Ruth
  • Goji, Noriko
  • Cameron, Andrew
  • Petkau, Aaron
  • Ortega Polo, Rodrigo
  • Tymensen, Lisa
  • Stamm, Courtney
  • Song, Jiming
  • Hannon, Sherry
  • Jones, Tineke
  • Church, Deirdre
  • Booker, Calvin W.
  • Amoako, Kingsley
  • Van Domselaar, Gary
  • Read, Ron R.
  • McAllister, Tim A.
Éditeur
Springer Nature

Résumé

For a One-Health investigation of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in Enterococcus spp., isolates from humans and beef cattle along with abattoirs, manured fields, natural streams, and wastewater from both urban and cattle feedlot sources were collected over two years. Species identification of Enterococcus revealed distinct associations across the continuum. Of the 8430 isolates collected, Enterococcus faecium and Enterococcus faecalis were the main species in urban wastewater (90%) and clinical human isolates (99%); Enterococcus hirae predominated in cattle (92%) and feedlot catch-basins (60%), whereas natural streams harbored environmental Enterococcus spp. Whole-genome sequencing of E. faecalis (n = 366 isolates) and E. faecium (n = 342 isolates), revealed source clustering of isolates, indicative of distinct adaptation to their respective environments. Phenotypic resistance to tetracyclines and macrolides encoded by tet(M) and erm(B) respectively, was prevalent among Enterococcus spp. regardless of source. For E. faecium from cattle, resistance to β-lactams and quinolones was observed among 3% and 8% of isolates respectively, compared to 76% and 70% of human clinical isolates. Clinical vancomycin-resistant E. faecium exhibited high rates of multi-drug resistance, with resistance to all β-lactam, macrolides, and quinolones tested. Differences in the AMR profiles among isolates reflected antimicrobial use practices in each sector of the One-Health continuum.

Sujet

  • Sciences et technologie

Mots-clés

  • antimicrobial resistance,
  • anti-infective agents,
  • microbiology

Droits

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

Pagination

1-16

Évalué par les pairs

Yes

Niveau de libre accès

Or

Identifiants

ISSN
2045-2322

Article

Titre de la revue
Scientific Reports
Volume de la revue
10
Numéro de l'élément
3937
Date d'acceptation
2020-02-13
Date de soumission
2019-10-19

Référence(s)

Zaheer, R., Cook, S. R., Barbieri, R., Goji, N., Cameron, A., Petkau, A., Ortega Polo, R., Tymensen, L., Stamm, C., Song, J., Hannon, S., Jones, T., Church, D., Booker, C. W., Amoako, K., Van Domselaar, G., Read, R. R., & McAllister, T. A. (2020). Surveillance of Enterococcus spp. reveals distinct species and antimicrobial resistance diversity across a One-Health continuum. Scientific Reports, 10, Article 3937. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-61002-5

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Collection(s)

Biology

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