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Antimicrobial Resistance Profiles and Genetic Typing of Serovars from Chicken Embryos in China. | LitMetric

Antimicrobial Resistance Profiles and Genetic Typing of Serovars from Chicken Embryos in China.

Antibiotics (Basel)

Department of Veterinary Medicine, Institute of Preventive Veterinary Sciences, College of Animal Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China.

Published: September 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates antimicrobial resistance in chicken embryos in Henan province, revealing high resistance rates to ampicillin and sulfisoxazole, with 67.5% of strains being multidrug resistant.
  • The analysis identified 37 antimicrobial resistance genes, with 14 genes detected, indicating that different serovars exhibited varying levels of resistance.
  • Pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) typing grouped the strains into 22 subtypes across nine clusters, highlighting the genetic diversity among the resistant strains.

Article Abstract

continues to be a major food and public health burden worldwide that can threaten human health via eating contaminated meats, particularly those originating from chicken. In this study, the antimicrobial resistance profiles, epidemiological characteristics of resistance genes, and pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE-XbaI) typing of 120 non-Pullorum/Gallinarum isolates recovered from chicken embryos in Henan province were determined. The antimicrobial resistant phenotypes and evaluation of the extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (ESBLs) producing strains of were investigated by the Kirby-Bauer test and the double-disk synergy test. Additionally, 37 antimicrobial resistance genes encoding resistance to five different categories, including aminoglycosides, cephalosporins, sulphonamides, tetracyclines, and β-lactams, were examined by conventional PCR. However, genotyping analysis was conducted by macro-restriction using enzyme XbaI followed by the separation of the restricted DNA fragments by PFGE. The results of this study showed that the studied strains were highly resistant to ampicillin (66.67%) and sulfisoxazole (66.67%), while they were all susceptible to meropenem, imipenem, colistin, and chloramphenicol. Additionally, 67.5% (81/120) of the studied strains were multidrug resistant, and 21.67% (26/120) were phenotypically confirmed as ESBLs positive. The statistical analysis showed that resistance depends on the serovars, and ESBLs positive strains showed more multi-resistance than ESBLs negative strains ( < 0.05). The genotypic antimicrobial resistance showed the detection of 14 among the 37 tested genes, and the concordance between genotypic and phenotypic antimicrobial resistance ranged from 0% to 100% depending on the serovars. However, the PFGE-XbaI typing results showed that the examined strains were divided into 22 individual subtypes and were grouped in nine clusters, with similarity values ranging from 64.7% to 100%. From this study, we can conclude that the antimicrobial resistance of serovars isolated from chicken embryos in Henan province was alarming, with rigorous multidrug resistance, which requires the urgent mitigation of the use of antimicrobial drugs in chicken hatcheries. Additionally, our results showed evidence of the presence of different PFGE patterns among the studied serovars, suggesting the presence of different sources of contamination.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8532839PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10101156DOI Listing

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