Antimicrobial use in food-producing animals such as pigs is a significant issue due to its association with antimicrobial resistance. Florfenicol is a broad-spectrum phenicol antibiotic used in swine for various indications; however, its effect on the swine microbiome and resistome is largely unknown. This study investigated these effects in piglets treated intramuscularly with florfenicol at 1 and 7 days of age. Fecal samples were collected from treated ( = 30) and untreated ( = 30) pigs at nine different time points up until 140 days of age, and the fecal metagenomes were sequenced. The fecal microbiomes of the two groups of piglets were most dissimilar in the immediate period following florfenicol administration. These differences were driven in part by an increase in the relative abundance of , , and spp. in the florfenicol-treated piglets and spp., , and in the control piglets. In addition to selecting for florfenicol resistance genes (, , and ), florfenicol also selected for genes conferring resistance to the aminoglycosides, beta-lactams, or sulfonamides up until weaning at 21 days of age. Florfenicol-resistant isolated from these piglets were found to carry a plasmid with , along with (A), , , , and /. A plasmid carrying and (phenicols and oxazolidinones) was identified in florfenicol-resistant , , and isolates from the treated piglets. This study highlights the potential for co-selection and perturbation of the fecal microbial community in pre-weaned piglets administered florfenicol.IMPORTANCEAntimicrobial use remains a serious challenge in food-animal production due to its linkage with antimicrobial resistance. Antimicrobial resistance can reduce the efficacy of veterinary treatment and can potentially be transferred to humans through the food chain or direct contact with animals and their environment. In this study, early-life florfenicol treatment in piglets altered the composition of the fecal microbiome and selected for many unrelated antimicrobial resistance genes up until weaning at 21 days of age. Part of this co-selection process appeared to involve an plasmid carrying a florfenicol resistance gene along with genes conferring resistance to at least four other antimicrobial classes. In addition, florfenicol selected for certain genes that provide resistance to multiple antimicrobial classes, including the oxazolidinones. These results highlight that florfenicol can co-select for multiple antimicrobial resistance genes, and their presence on mobile genetic elements suggests the potential for transfer to other bacteria.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01250-24 | DOI Listing |
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11651103 | PMC |
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