| Literature DB >> 33232324 |
Catherine N Wilson1,2,3, Caisey V Pulford1, James Akoko4, Blanca Perez Sepulveda1, Alexander V Predeus1, Jessica Bevington1, Patricia Duncan5, Neil Hall6, Paul Wigley1, Nicholas Feasey2,7, Gina Pinchbeck1, Jay C D Hinton1, Melita A Gordon1,2, Eric M Fèvre1,3.
Abstract
Salmonella is a major cause of foodborne disease globally. Pigs can carry and shed non-typhoidal Salmonella (NTS) asymptomatically, representing a significant reservoir for these pathogens. To investigate Salmonella carriage by African domestic pigs, faecal and mesenteric lymph node samples were taken at slaughter in Nairobi, Busia (Kenya) and Chikwawa (Malawi) between October 2016 and May 2017. Selective culture, antisera testing and whole genome sequencing were performed on samples from 647 pigs; the prevalence of NTS carriage was 12.7% in Busia, 9.1% in Nairobi and 24.6% in Chikwawa. Two isolates of S. Typhimurium ST313 were isolated, but were more closely related to ST313 isolates associated with gastroenteritis in the UK than bloodstream infection in Africa. The discovery of porcine NTS carriage in Kenya and Malawi reveals potential for zoonotic transmission of diarrhoeal strains to humans in these countries, but not for transmission of clades specifically associated with invasive NTS disease in Africa.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33232324 PMCID: PMC7748489 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0008796
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 2The diversity of pig-derived Salmonella identified in Kenya and Malawi.
A maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree based on core gene SNPs. The tree was rooted at the inferred position of the outgroup S. bongori. B. Maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree (unrooted). Note the colours refer to clade designation. Both visualised using ITOL (https://itol.embl.de).
Prevalence of non-typhoidal Salmonella serovars.
| Sampling location | Total number of NTS isolates | Number of pigs in which NTS was detected | Percentage pigs carrying NTS (%) | Number of NTS isolates detected from mesenteric lymph node samples | Number of NTS isolates detected from faecal samples | Number of pigs in which more than 1 NTS isolate was detected | Number of pigs carrying more than 1 serovar of NTS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Busia (n = 276) | 61 | 35 | 12.7 (8.7–16.6) | 44 | 16 | 22 | 2 |
| Nairobi (n = 306) | 40 | 28 | 9.1 (5.9–12.4) | 21 | 19 | 12 | 2 |
| Chikwawa (n = 65) | 20 | 16 | 24.6 (14.1–35.1) | 18 | 2 | 9 | 1 |
* This means that more than one NTS isolate was isolated during the culture method or from the faecal and mesenteric lymph node samples from one pig.
Fig 3The Salmonella serovars detected in each of the study locations.
Antimicrobial susceptibility phenotypes and genotypes in pig-derived Salmonella.
Heat map of antimicrobial resistance determinants and resistance phenotypes linked to 28 pig derived Salmonella isolates. Phenotype is displayed using colour, with green representing susceptibility and red representing resistance, according to guidelines set by EUCAST [47]. Light green represents those isolates for which antimicrobial susceptibility testing was not available (2/28 isolates). The antibiotic resistance genes that were identified by staramr v0.5.1 (https://github.com/phac-nml/staramr) are displayed in white text.
| Pefloxacin | Ceftriaxone | Fosfomycin | Tetracycline | Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole | Ampicillin | Gentamicin | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FD01853127 | dfrA14 | aph | |||||
| FD01543571 | tet(A) | dfrA14 | aph | ||||
| FD01849520 | tet(A) | dfrA14 | aph | ||||
| FD01844591 | sul2 | aph | |||||
| FD01844594 | tet(A) | sul2 | aph | ||||
| FD01844598 | tet(A) | sul2 | aph | ||||
| FD01844614 | tet(A) | sul2 | aph | ||||
| FD01844645 | tet(A) | sul2 | aph | ||||
| FD01844653 | tet(A) | sul2 | aph | ||||
| FD01876797 | sul2 | blaTEM-1B | |||||
| FD01543496 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01543507 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01543523 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01543532 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01543534 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01543540 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01543542 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01543563 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01543565 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01844601 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01844605 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01846502 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01849512 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01872668 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01872725 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01876839 | fosA7 | ||||||
| FD01543506 | gyrA (D87Y) | fosA7 | |||||
| FD01844630 | tet(J) |
Fig 4Two pig-derived S. Typhimurium ST313 isolates in the context of published ST313 genomes.
The A maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree based on core genome SNPs. Phylogeny is outgroup-rooted to S. Typhimurium ST19 strain 4/74 [57]. Visualised using ITOL (https://itol.embl.de).
Fig 5Comparison of the plasmid and prophage repertoires of S. Typhimurium ST313 variants.
The presence and absence of Salmonella prophages BTP1, Gifsy-2 ST64B, Gifsy-1 and BTP5 and Salmonella plasmids pSLT-BT, pBT1, pBT2 and pBT3 are shown on three variants of S. Typhimurium ST313. Grey indicates similarity above 95% to African ST313 lineage 2 reference genome D23580. Red indicates absence compared to African ST313 lineage 2 reference genome D23580. The red rectangle on plasmid pSLT-BT represents the multidrug resistance cassette which is present in African ST313 lineage 2, but absent from UK-ST313 and the pig-derived ST313 isolates FD01844610 and FD01844641.