| Literature DB >> 30548172 |
Hang Pan1, Xin Zhou1, Wenqin Chai1, Narayan Paudyal1, Shuning Li1, Xiao Zhou1, Kun Zhou1, Qingqing Wu1, Beibei Wu2, Guogang Li3, Andreja Rajkovic4, Weihuan Fang1,5, Shelley C Rankin6, Yan Li1,5, Xuebin Xu7, Dieter M Schifferli6, Min Yue1,5.
Abstract
Salmonella enterica Newport (S. Newport), with phylogenetic diversity feature, contributes to significant public health concerns. Our previous study suggested that S. Newport from multiple animal-borne routes, with distinct antibiotic resistant pattern, might transmit to human. However, their genetic information was lacking. As a complement to the earlier finding, we investigate the relationship between each other among the hosts, sources, genotype and antibiotic resistance in S. Newport. We used the multilocus sequence typing (MLST) in conjunction with minimum inhibitory concentration of 16 antibiotics of globally sampled 1842 S. Newport strains, including 282 newly contributed Chinese strains, to evaluate this association. Our analysis reveals that sequence types (STs) are significantly associated with different host sources, including livestock (ST45), birds (ST5), contaminated water and soil (ST118), reptiles (ST46) and seafood (ST31). Importantly, ST45 contained most of (344/553) the multi-drug resistance (MDR) strains, which were believed to be responsible for human MDR bacterial infections. Chinese isolates were detected to form two unique lineages of avian (ST808 group) and freshwater animal (ST2364 group) origin. Taken together, genotyping information of S. Newport could serve to improve Salmonella source-originated diagnostics and guide better selection of antibiotic therapy against Salmonella infections.Entities:
Keywords: Salmonella Newport; antibiotic resistance; bovine; plant; sequence type; sources
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30548172 PMCID: PMC6634944 DOI: 10.1111/tbed.13099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transbound Emerg Dis ISSN: 1865-1674 Impact factor: 5.005