| Literature DB >> 27558582 |
Mary Joyce Targino Lopes Magalhães1, Gemilson Pontes2, Paula Takita Serra3, Antonio Balieiro3, Diogo Castro3, Fabio Alessandro Pieri4, James Lee Crainey3, Paulo Afonso Nogueira1,3, Patricia Puccinelli Orlandi5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Multi-drug resistant forms of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (MDRPA) are a major source of nosocomial infections and when discharged into streams and rivers from hospital wastewater treatment plants (HWWTP) they are known to be able to persist for extended periods. In the city of Manaus (Western Brazilian Amazon), the effluent of three HWWTPs feed into the urban Mindu stream which crosses the city from its rainforest source before draining into the Rio Negro. The stream is routinely used by Manaus residents for bathing and cleaning (of clothes as well as domestic utensils) and, during periods of flooding, can contaminate wells used for drinking water.Entities:
Keywords: 16S-rRNA gene; Amazon; Contamination; Hospital effluent; PFGE; Pseudomonas aeruginosa
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27558582 PMCID: PMC4995675 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-016-0798-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Fig. 1Study setting. (a) Manaus city (red point), state of Amazonas (yellow), Brazil (outline). (b) Mindu stream crossing Manaus to its Rio Negro drainage site (Outfall). (c) Mindu stream flows from its source in the Ducke Forest Reserve and crosses Manaus receiving non-treated wastewater and wastewater from the treatment plants of at least three hospitals. Red points show the sites where surface water samples were collected for the preparation of metagenomic libraries. The blue points show the sites where surface water collections were made from the Mindu stream and green squares show hospitals near to Mindu stream
Fig. 2Proportions of Pseudomonas genus and species recovered by metagenomic analysis from Source and Outfall of the Mindu stream: a proportion of Pseudomonas genus b proportion of Pseudomonas species isolated from the source c proportion of Pseudomonas species isolated at Outfall
Fig. 3Antimicrobial resistant and biofilm formation analysis. Diagram showing (a) the antimicrobial resistance profiles of 25 P. aeruginosa isolates obtained from water samples tested in this study. Isolates are labelled with either RHE, THE or ST to indicate their origin: RHE for raw hospital effluent, THE for treated hospital effluent and ST for stream sample. The susceptibility testing was carried out according to the protocol of the Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI, 2012) using 14 different antimicrobials: Levofloxacin (LEV); Norfloxacin (NOR); Ciprofloxacin (CIP); Ceftriaxon (CRO); Cefepime (CPM); Ceftazidima (CAZ); Meropenem (MER); Imipenem (IMP); Amicacina (AMI); Gentamicina (GEN); Ampicilin (AMP); Piperaciline-Tazobactam (PTZ); Aztreonam monobactan (ATM); and Polimixina B-I (POL). Black-squares are used to indicate resistance and white-squares are used to indicate susceptibility. b Frequencies of antimicrobial resistant phenotypes were calculated as percentages of antimicrobial resistance among isolates of same origin. c-d Comparison of biofilm formation in LB broth with or without shaking. Biofilm production expressed as absorbance measurements taken at 600 nm. Comparison between MDRPA versus P. aeruginosa (c); Comparison between HE versus ST isolates (d); e-f Linear regression analysis showing that the number of antimicrobials a MDRPA is resistant to correlates with the amount of biofilm it produces independently of shaking
Fig. 4Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis dendogram of 25 isolates of P. aeruginosa obtained from hospital effluent (HE) and Mindu stream (ST) water samples (Manaus-AM, Brazil). PFGE profiles were compared and aligned by BioNumerics software. The pulse-types were not classified
Fig. 5A schematic diagram showing a summary of the results obtained for this study. Abbreviations used in this diagram are the same as those used in other figures