| Literature DB >> 26613786 |
David Skurnik1, Olivier Clermont2, Thomas Guillard3, Adrien Launay2, Olga Danilchanka4, Stéphanie Pons3, Laure Diancourt5, François Lebreton4, Kristina Kadlec6, Damien Roux7, Deming Jiang3, Sara Dion2, Hugues Aschard8, Maurice Denamur2, Colette Cywes-Bentley3, Stefan Schwarz6, Olivier Tenaillon2, Antoine Andremont9, Bertrand Picard10, John Mekalanos4, Sylvain Brisse5, Erick Denamur11.
Abstract
In the context of the great concern about the impact of human activities on the environment, we studied 403 commensal Escherichia coli/Escherichia clade strains isolated from several animal and human populations that have variable contacts to one another. Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) showed a decrease of diversity 1) in strains isolated from animals that had an increasing contact with humans and 2) in all strains that had increased antimicrobial resistance. A specific B1 phylogroup clonal complex (CC87, Institut Pasteur schema nomenclature) of animal origin was identified and characterized as being responsible for the increased antimicrobial resistance prevalence observed in strains from the environments with a high human-mediated antimicrobial pressure. CC87 strains have a high capacity of acquiring and disseminating resistance genes with specific metabolic and genetic determinants as demonstrated by high-throughput sequencing and phenotyping. They are good mouse gut colonizers but are not virulent. Our data confirm the predominant role of human activities in the emergence of antimicrobial resistance in the environmental bacterial strains and unveil a particular E. coli clonal complex of animal origin capable of spreading antimicrobial resistance to other members of microbial communities.Entities:
Keywords: Escherichia coli; antimicrobial resistance; clonal complex 87; commensal; phylogroup B1
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26613786 PMCID: PMC5013867 DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msv280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biol Evol ISSN: 0737-4038 Impact factor: 16.240