| Literature DB >> 29081769 |
Jing Wang1, Chan-Ping Zhi1, Xiao-Jie Chen1, Ze-Wen Guo1, Wu-Ling Liu1, Juan Luo1, Xin-Yi Huang1, Li Zeng1, Jia-Wei Huang1, Ying-Bi Xia1, Meng-Ying Yi1, Teng Huang1, Zhen-Ling Zeng1, Jian-Hua Liu1.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence and genetic elements of oqxAB among Escherichia coli isolates from animals, retail meat, and humans (patients with infection or colonization) in Guangzhou, China. A total of 1,354 E. coli isolates were screened for oqxAB by PCR. Fifty oqxAB-positive isolates were further characterized by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), multilocus sequence typing (MLST), S1-PFGE, genetic environment analysis, plasmid replicon typing, and plasmid sequencing. oqxAB was detected in 172 (33.79%), 60 (17.34%), and 90 (18.07%) E. coli isolates from animal, food, and human, respectively. High clonal diversity was observed among oqxAB-positive isolates. In 21 oqxAB-containing transformants, oqxAB was flanked by two IS26 elements in the same orientation, formed a composite transposon Tn6010 in 19 transformants, and was located on plasmids (33.3~500 kb) belonging to IncN1-F33:A-:B- (n = 3), IncHI2/ST3 (n = 3), F-:A18:B- (n = 2), F-:A-:B54 (n = 2), or others. Additionally, oqxAB was co-located with multiple resistance genes on the same plasmid, such as aac(6')-Ib-cr and/or qnrS, which were identified in two F-:A18:B- plasmids from pigs, and blaCTX-M-55, rmtB, fosA3, and floR, which were detected in two N1-F33:A-:B- plasmids from patients. The two IncHI2/ST3 oqxAB-bearing plasmids, pHNLDF400 and pHNYJC8, which were isolated from human patient and chicken meat, respectively, contained a typical IncHI2-type backbone, and were similar to each other with 2-bp difference, and also showed 99% identity to the Salmonella Typhimurium oqxAB-carrying plasmids pHXY0908 (chicken) and pHK0653 (human patient). Horizontal transfer mediated by mobile elements may be the primary mechanism underlying oqxAB spread in E. coli isolates obtained from various sources in Guangzhou, China. The transmission of identical oqxAB-carrying IncHI2 plasmids between food products and humans might pose a serious threat to public health.Entities:
Keywords: Escherichia coli; PMQR; antimicrobial resistance; food safety; plasmids
Year: 2017 PMID: 29081769 PMCID: PMC5645526 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.01982
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1Comparison of antimicrobial resistance among oqxAB-positive E. coli isolates from food-producing animals, food products, and human patients. AMP, ampicillin; CTX, cefotaxime; AMI, amikacin; GEN, gentamycin; NEO, neomycin; APR, apramycin; TET, tetracycline; FLR, florfenicol; CL, colistin; SXT, sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim; CIP, ciprofloxacin; OLA, olaquindox.
Figure 2Comparison of the multidrug resistance regions of plasmids pHNLDF400 and pHNYJC8 with other similar IncHI2 plasmids. Arrows indicate the positions and directions of gene transcription. Regions with >99% homology are shaded in gray. ΔIndicates a truncated gene. The 1-kb distance scale is displayed in the upper left corner. Sequences were obtained from GenBank accession numbers pHNAH67, KX246266; pHXY0908, KM877269; pHK0653, KT335433; and pHNSHP45-2, KU341381.
Characteristics of transformants carrying oqxAB.
| DH5α | 0.008 | 16 | |||||||
| Chicken meat | 2011 | ST10 | AMP, GEN, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.25 | 128 | ~76.8 | ND | ||
| YJMC8-1 | Chicken meat | 2011 | ST93 | AMP, GEN, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.25 | 128 | ~244.4 (4) | ST3-IncHI2 | |
| SNX19-2 | Chicken | 2012 | ST542 | AMP, GEN, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.25 | >256 | ND (3) | N1-F-:A-:B54 | |
| SNJ11-1 | Chicken | 2012 | ST10 | AMP, GEN, FFC | 0.25 | 32 | ~104.5 | F52:A-:B- | |
| SNJ23-1 | Chicken | 2012 | NEW | AMP, GEN, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.25 | >256 | ~350, ~33.3 | ND | |
| SNJ41-1 | Chicken | 2012 | ST602 | AMP, TET, SXT | 0.03 | 256 | ~398.4, ~33.3 | ND | |
| Chicken | 2012 | ST6697 | 0.015 | 32 | ~76.8 (2) | ND | |||
| Chicken | 2012 | ST224 | AMP, GEN, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.125 | >256 | ~138.9 | ND | ||
| SNJ113-6 | Chicken | 2012 | ST178 | AMP, GEN, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.125 | >256 | ~80 | ND | |
| TZC48-1 | Pig | 2012 | ST165 | AMP, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.015 | 128 | ~104.5 (3) | F-:A-:B54 | |
| TZC152-6 | Pig | 2012 | ST165 | AMP, TET, SXT | 0.25 | 256 | ~104.5 | F-:A18:B- | |
| TZC212-1 | Pig | 2012 | NEW | AMP, TET, SXT | 0.125 | 64 | ~104.5 | F-:A18:B- | |
| TZC215-1 | Pig | 2012 | ST10 | AMP, GEN, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.125 | 64 | ~244.4 | F-:A-:B54 | |
| TZC338-4 | Pig | 2012 | ST10 | AMP, GEN, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.125 | >256 | ~76.8 | IncN1 | |
| AHH13-1 | Hospital 1 | 2012 | ST10 | AMP, GEN, TET, SXT | 0.06 | 64 | ~54.7 | ND | |
| ZYTF3-1 | Hospital 1 | 2013 | ST410 | AMP, GEN, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.25 | 64 | ~76.8 | ND | |
| ZYTF32-1 | Hospital 1 | 2013 | ST58 | AMP, CTX, AMI, GEN, FFC, SXT | 0.015 | 64 | ~138.9 | N1-F33:A-:B- | |
| ZYTM118-1 | Hospital 1 | 2013 | NEW | AMP, CTX, AMI, GEN, FFC, SXT | 0.015 | 64 | ~138.9 | N1-F33:A-:B- | |
| ZYTF154-1 | Hospital 1 | 2013 | NEW | AMP, CTX, AMI, GEN, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.015 | >256 | ~244.4, ~216.9 | N1-F33:A-:B- | |
| Hospital 2 | 2013 | ST453 | AMP, GEN, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.25 | 256 | ~500, ~244.4 | ST3-IncHI2 | ||
| LDHF400-1 | Hospital 2 | 2013 | ST57 | AMP, GEN, TET, FFC, SXT | 0.25 | 64 | ~244.4 (4) | ST3-IncHI2 | |
Original isolates which cannot be typeable by PFGE are underlined. The transformants were designated as the name of their correspondent donor strains plus dash and number.
AMP, ampicillin; CTX, cefotaxime; AMI, amikacin; GEN, gentamycin; TET, tetracycline; FFC, florfenicol; SXT, sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim.
CIP, ciprofloxacin; OLA, olaquindox.
(n), number of plasmids in the transformant.
ND, not determined.
Figure 3Sequence comparison of plasmids pHNLDF400 and pHNYJC8 with pHNSHP45-2 (GenBank accession number KU341381), pHXY0908 (KM877269), pHK0653 (KT335433), and pHNAH67 (KX246266) using BRIG. The reference sequence pHNSHP45-2 is shown in black.