| Literature DB >> 29941843 |
Elena A Oniciuc1, Eleni Likotrafiti2, Adrián Alvarez-Molina3, Miguel Prieto4, Jesús A Santos5, Avelino Alvarez-Ordóñez6.
Abstract
The authors wish to make the following changes to their paper [1]. Due to an undetected mistake in the references management, certain errors appeared in the reference list and a reference was duplicated in Table 1[...].Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29941843 PMCID: PMC6070798 DOI: 10.3390/genes9070315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Main research studies published in recent years applying whole genome sequencing (WGS) to characterize antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in foodborne bacteria.
| Reference | Microbial Species | Number of Isolates Sequenced | Origin | Main Findings in Relation to AMR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [36] | 101 | Fish | All sequenced isolates harbored three AMR genes against beta-lactam antibiotics encoded on the chromosome. | |
| [37] | 589 | Retail poultry meat | The following AMR genes were identified: | |
| [38] | 114 | Humans, retail meats, and cecal samples from food production animals | Eighteen resistance genes, including | |
| [26] | 2 | Retail meats | A self-transmissible plasmid carrying multiple antibiotic resistance genes was identified, carrying genes encoding resistance to gentamicin, kanamycin, streptomycin, streptothricin, and tetracycline. | |
| [39] | 40 | Human and porcine origin | AMR genotypes were characterized by resistance to tetracycline [ | |
| [40] | 2 | Ground pork | Identification of vancomycin ( | |
| [31] | 197 | Various animal and food sources | Resistance genotypes correlated with resistance phenotypes in 96.5% of cases for the 11 drugs investigated. | |
| [21] | 200 | Pigs | High concordance (99.74%) between phenotypic and predicted antimicrobial susceptibility was observed. | |
| [41] | ESBL-producing | 24 | Fish and environmental samples | Nine of eleven sequenced fish isolates had the |
| [42] | 17 | Retail chicken meat | All strains carried an IncK plasmid with a | |
| [43] | 168 | Broilers and free-range retail poultry (meat/ceca) | The prevalence rates of ESBL producing | |
| [44] | 18 | Dairy cow manure | All sequenced isolates carried at least one β-lactamase | |
| [45] | 16 | Swine farm | ||
| [46] | 26 | Humans, cows, pigs, horse, rabbit, goat, environments and food | A total of 39 plasmids were identified. | |
| [47] | 42 | Feedlot cattle | 70% of the cattle strains carried at least one AMR gene | |
| [48] | 3 | Dairy cows | The | |
| [49] | 463 | Retail meats and farm local samples | To improve the concordance between genotypic and phenotypic data, it was proposed to reduce the phenotypic cut-off values for streptomycin to ≥32 µg mL−1 for both | |
| [50] | 4 | Chicken meat | AMR-associated SNPs were detected (linked to resistance to fluoroquinolones, macrolides, and tetracyclines). | |
| [51] | 11 | Broiler and free-range chicken | WGS revealed the presence of five or six well characterized AMR genes, including those encoding a resistance-nodulation-division efflux pump | |
| [30] | 7 | Pig and human samples at abbatoirs | AMR genes associated with resistance to β-lactams, aminoglycosides, fluoroquinolones, macrolides, lincosamide, streptogramins, rifampicin, sulfonamides, trimethoprim, phenicols, and tetracycline were identified. | |
| [29] | 44 | Chicken, turkey and pork meat | Meat-source isolates were significantly more likely to be multidrug resistant and resistant to tetracycline and gentamicin than clinical isolates. | |
| [52] | 2 | Ready-to-eat food | Seven antibiotic and efflux pump related genes which may confer resistance against lincomycin, erythromycin, fosfomycin, quinolones, tetracycline, penicillin, and macrolides were identified in the genomes of both strains. | |
| [53] | 5 | Environments from pork processing plants | Strains of a particular sequence type were shown to contain the BAC resistance transposon Tn | |
| [54] | 8 | Food-producing animals | Seven integrative and conjugative elements were identical to ICEPmiJpn1, carrying the cephalosporinase gene | |
| [55] | Non-typhoidal | 536 | Retail meat | A total of 65 unique resistance genes, plus mutations in two structural resistance loci, were identified. |
| [56] | Non-typhoidal | 1738 | Animal, food and human sources | The Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) predictions were correlated with the ResFinder database. |
| [20] | Non-typhoidal | 3491 | Received by Public Health England’s Gastrointestinal Bacteria Reference Unit from different origins for surveillance purposes | Discrepancies between phenotypic and genotypic profiles for one or more antimicrobials were detected for 76 isolates (2.18%). |
| [33] | 90 | Dairy cattle and humans | Genotypic prediction of phenotypic resistance resulted in a mean sensitivity of 97.2 and specificity of 85.2. | |
| [57] | 984 | Swine | Multiple genotypic resistance determinants were predominant, including resistance against ampicillin, streptomycin, sulfonamides, and tetracyclines. | |
| [58] | 1 | Swine carcass | The following AMR genes were identified: | |
| [59] | 113 | Humans, abbatoir poultry and retail poultry | CMY-2 plasmids, all belonging to incompatibility group I1, were identified in cefoxitin-resistant isolates. | |
| [60] | 1 | Poultry slaughterhouse | 24 multi-drug resistance (MDR) genes, located on 4 plasmids, were identified, including the | |
| [61] | 12 | Humans, food-producing animals and meat | Some isolates harbored a conjugative megaplasmid (~280–320 Kb) which carried the ESBL gene | |
| [62] | 2 | Dairy farm environments | The plasmid-mediated | |
| [63] | 225 | Humans, animals, feed, and food | The non-clinical use of narrow-spectrum penicillins (e.g., benzylpenicillin) might have favored the diffusion of plasmids carrying the | |
| [64] | 4 | Poultry and humans | The following AMR genes were identified: | |
| [65] | 2 | Chicken carcasses | A total of five plasmids conveying AMR genes were found. | |
| [66] | 44 | Human stool and contaminated food samples | AMR genes were only identified in eight isolates, linked to resistance to tetracycline, ciprofloxacin or ampicillin. | |
| [67] | 66 | Retail meats | Eleven | |
| [68] | 9 | Pork, chicken and turkey meat | Multiple resistance genes/mutations were detected. | |
| [69] | 12 | Livestock animals | Most isolates harbored resistance genes to ≥3 antimicrobial classes in addition to β-lactams. Heavy metal resistance genes were detected in most European | |
| [70] | 15 | Bulk milk | A divergent | |
| [71] | 5 | Raw milk | ||
| [72] | Carbapenem-resistant bacteria | 28 | Dairy cattle | Isolates included: 3 |