| Literature DB >> 35878334 |
Chahrazed Belhout1, Rachid Elgroud2, Patrick Butaye3.
Abstract
The prevalence of methicillin resistance in staphylococci has been increasing globally and is currently one of the major public health concerns. In particular, treating infections caused by staphylococci with acquired antimicrobial resistance is problematic, as their treatment is more difficult. The resistance is found both in human and animal staphylococcal strains. Methicillin-resistant staphylococci (MRS) have also been increasingly reported in wildlife. In Arab countries, MRS has been detected in food producing animals and food products; however, the risk this poses is somewhat unclear, and still a significant lack of information on the trend and distribution of these pathogens in these countries, which have a specific ecosystem (desert) and traditions (Muslim culture). In this manuscript, we aim to provide an overview of the prevalence and the major MRS clonal lineages circulating in these specific countries and compare to them other situations with different ecosystems and cultures.Entities:
Keywords: Arab countries; MENA; Middle East; North Africa; animals; food products; methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA); methicillin-resistant coagulase-negative staphylococci (MRCNS); methicillin-resistant non-aureus staphylococci (MRNaS); methicillin-resistant staphylococci (MRS)
Year: 2022 PMID: 35878334 PMCID: PMC9320237 DOI: 10.3390/vetsci9070317
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Sci ISSN: 2306-7381
Recent reclassification of members of the genus Staphylococcus (Adapted from [2]).
| Staphylococcal Species and Subspecies | Old Taxonomic Assignments | Current Taxonomic Reassignment | Coagulase |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| + | ||
|
| - | ||
|
| - | ||
|
| - | ||
|
| - | ||
|
|
|
| - |
|
|
|
| - |
|
|
|
| - |
|
|
|
| - |
|
|
|
| - |
|
| - | ||
|
| - | ||
|
| - | ||
|
| - |
The recent reclassification of members of the family Staphylococcaceae by analyzing their core genome phylogeny complemented with genome-based indices and suggested the following proposals [2]: 1: The unification of Staphylococcus aureus subsp. anaerobius and Staphylococcus aureus subsp. aureus as Staphylococcus aureus. 2: The unification of Staphylococcus carnosus subsp. utilis and Staphylococcus carnosus subsp. carnosus as Staphylococcus carnosus. 3: Staphylococcus cohnii subsp. urealyticus as the novel species Staphylococcus urealyticus. 4: One clade, composed of S. sciuri, S. fleurettii, S. lentus, S. stepanovicii, and S. vitulinus, is deeply branching from the remaining Staphylococcus species and they are as equally distant from the other Staphylococcus species as Macrococcus is from Staphylococcus, it has been proposed that this clade be moved into the novel genus Mammaliicoccus with Mammaliicoccus sciuri as the type species. 5: Staphylococcus schleiferi subsp. coagulans as the novel species Staphylococcus coagulans. 6: Staphylococcus succinis subsp. casei as the novel species Staphylococcus casei. 7: Staphylococcus petrasii subsp. pragensis as the novel species Staphylococcus pragensis. 8: S. petrasii subsp. croceilyticus as the novel species Staphylococcus croceilyticus.
Figure 1Map of the Arab world countries [34].
Prevalence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in food-producing animals in different Arab countries.
| Animals | Healthy/Sick | Samples | Prevalence of MRSA | Lineages of MRSA | Country | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cattle | Healthy | Nasal swabs | 15.5% | N/D 1 | Saudi Arabia | [ |
| Healthy | Nasal swabs | 31% | N/D | Algeria | [ | |
| Sick, mastitis | Milk samples | 35.7% | N/D | Egypt | [ | |
| Sick, mastitis | Milk samples | 3.60% | ST4114-t10381, ST4120-t267 | Tunisia | [ | |
| Sick, mastitis | Milk samples | 28.6% | CC1, CC5, CC45 | Egypt | [ | |
| Healthy | Milk samples | 31.8% | N/D | Jordan | [ | |
| Healthy | Nasal swabs | 40% | N/D | Iraq | [ | |
| Sick, mastitis | Milk samples | 24.5% | CC5, CC22, CC88 | Egypt | [ | |
| Healthy | Nasal swabs, | 3.7% | ST97-t267-agrI-SCC | Tunisia | [ | |
| Sheep/goats | Healthy | Nasal swabs | 9.3% | CC80-ST80 | Algeria | [ |
| Healthy | Nasal swabs | 3% | CC80-ST153-t044 | Tunisia | [ | |
| Healthy | Milk samples | 29.8% sheep/11.5% goat | N/D | Jordan | [ | |
| Healthy | Nasal swabs | 28.9% | N/D | Saudi Arabia | [ | |
| Healthy and Sick | Nasal swabs | 2% (goats) | N/D | Saudi Arabia | [ | |
| Healthy | Milk samples | 17.14% | N/D | Saudi Arabia | [ | |
| Poultry | Healthy | Nasal swabs | 30% | N/D | Algeria | [ |
| Healthy | swabs | 27% | CC398; CC5 | Egypt | [ | |
| Healthy | Cloacal swab | 27.3% | N/D | Iraq | [ | |
| Healthy | Nasal swabs | Layers: 57%, broilers: 50% | N/D | Algeria | [ | |
| Camels | Healthy | Nasal swabs | 4.4% | CC80 | Algeria | [ |
1 N/D: Not Determined.
Prevalence and types of MRSA in food products in Arab countries.
| Source | Year | Country | No. of Tested Samples | No. of MRSA Positive | Lineages of MRSA | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dairy cattle, sheep, and goat bulk tank milk | 2017 | Jordan | 208 | 54 (25.97%) | ND | [ |
| Raw cow milk | 2018 | Tunisia | 300 | 3 (20%) | ST4114 | [ |
| Raw camel milk | 2019 | Saudi Arabia | 100 | 10 (50%) | ND | [ |
| Raw cow milk and traditional dairy products | 2018 | Algeria | 270 | 11 (17,74%) | ST8 | [ |
| Chicken meat | 2020 | Egypt | 144 | 8 (6%) | N/D | [ |
| Raw chicken meat | 2015 | Tunisia | 164 | 2 (1.2%) | ST30 t012 | [ |
| Retail meat (camel and chicken) | 2016 | Saudi Arabia | 100 | 6 (6%) | CC1 | [ |
| Beef meat | 2017 | Egypt | 100 | 4 (4%) | N/D | [ |
| Unpasteurized milk sold | 2021 | Algeria | 82 | 3 (30%) | ST80 | [ |
N/D: Not determined.