Identifying bacterial transmission pathways is crucial to inform strategies aimed at curbing the spread of pathogenic and antibiotic-resistant bacteria, especially in rapidly urbanizing low- and middle-income countries. In this study, we assessed bacterial strain-sharing and dissemination of antibiotic resistance across humans, domesticated poultry, canines, household soil, and drinking water in urban informal settlements in Nairobi, Kenya. We collected 321 samples from 50 households and performed Pooling Isolated Colonies-seq (PIC-seq) by sequencing pools of up to five colonies per sample to capture strain diversity, strain-sharing patterns, and overlap of antibiotic-resistant genes (ARGs). Bacterial strains isolated from the household environment carried clinically relevant ARGs, reinforcing the role of the environment in antibiotic resistance dissemination. Strain-sharing rates and resistome similarities across sample types were strongly correlated within households, suggesting clonal spread of bacteria is a main driver of dissemination of ARGs in the domestic urban environment. Within households, strain-sharing was rare between humans and animals but more frequent between humans and drinking water. contamination in stored drinking water was also associated with higher strain-sharing between humans in the same household. Our study demonstrates that contaminated drinking water facilitates human to human strain sharing and water treatment can disrupt transmission.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11326342PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.08.05.24311509DOI Listing

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