AI Article Synopsis

  • The spread of mcr-harboring Enterobacteriaceae, like Escherichia fergusonii, in animal products poses a significant public health risk due to their resistance to colistin, a last-resort antibiotic.
  • In a study conducted in Okinawa, Japan, 54 strains of E. fergusonii were tested, revealing that 9 strains from pigs and 9 from chickens exhibited multidrug resistance and were resistant to colistin.
  • Research also showed that these resistant strains were linked within farms, indicating a potential transmission pathway, and identified that the IncI2 plasmid plays a crucial role in the spread of the mcr-1 gene among these bacteria.

Article Abstract

The dissemination of mcr-harboring Enterobacteriaceae, e.g., Escherichia fergusonii, with resistance to colistin via animal products is a public health concern. In our previous study, E. fergusonii harboring the mcr gene were isolated from 11 pigs and 43 chickens. To understand the spread of mcr-harboring E. fergusonii in Okinawa, Japan, and to gain further insights into how they can be controlled, an antimicrobial susceptibility testing, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), a conjugation test for the transferability of mcr-harboring plasmids, and PCR-based replicon typing (PBRT) were performed using the 54 strains. According to the disk-diffusion and broth microdilution methods, 9 of the 11 strains from pigs and 9 of the 43 strains from chickens had multidrug resistance (MDR). The broth microdilution method showed that all strains were resistant to colistin, and the minimum inhibitory concentration of colistin was 4-16 μg/mL. PFGE suggested identical PFGE types were being transmitted within one pig farm, within one chicken farm, and among several chicken farms. These findings showed that some mcr-harboring E. fergusonii in Okinawa exhibited MDR, and these had spread within farms and between farms. In the mcr gene conjugation test and PBRT, a type IncI2 plasmid replicon was detected in all mcr-1-harboring transconjugants. Therefore, evidence suggests that the IncI2 plasmid is probably involved in the transmission of the mcr-1 gene. It is important to monitor the antimicrobial resistance profile and dissemination of the IncI2 plasmid in mcr-harboring E. fergusonii.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10017296PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1292/jvms.22-0288DOI Listing

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