-
Views
-
Cite
Cite
Jennie Fischer, Irene Rodríguez, Beatrice Baumann, Elisabeth Guiral, Lothar Beutin, Andreas Schroeter, Annemarie Kaesbohrer, Yvonne Pfeifer, Reiner Helmuth, Beatriz Guerra, blaCTX-M-15-carrying Escherichia coli and Salmonella isolates from livestock and food in Germany, Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, Volume 69, Issue 11, November 2014, Pages 2951–2958, https://doi.org/10.1093/jac/dku270
- Share Icon Share
The characterization of CTX-M-15 β-lactamase-producing Escherichia coli and Salmonella isolates originating mainly from German livestock and food.
E. coli (526, mainly commensals) and Salmonella (151) non-human isolates resistant to third-generation cephalosporins, originating from routine and monitoring submissions (2003–12) to the Federal Institute for Risk Assessment and different national targeted studies (2011–12), were examined for the presence of blaCTX-M-15 genes by PCR amplification/sequencing. Additional resistance and virulence genes were screened by DNA microarray and PCR amplification. E. coli isolates with blaCTX-M-15 were characterized by phylogenetic grouping, PFGE and multilocus sequence typing (MLST). The blaCTX-M-15 plasmids were analysed by replicon typing, plasmid MLST, S1 nuclease PFGE and Southern blot hybridization experiments.
Twenty-one E. coli (livestock, food and a toy; 4.0%) and two Salmonella (horse and swine; 1.3%) isolates were CTX-M-15 producers. E. coli isolates were mainly ascribed to three clonal lineages of sequence types ST678 (German outbreak with enteroaggregative Shiga-toxin-producing E. coli O104:H4; salmon, cucumber and a toy), ST410 (poultry, swine and cattle farms) and ST167/617 (swine farms and turkey meat). The blaCTX-M-15 genes were located on IncI1 and multireplicon IncF plasmids or on the chromosome of E. coli ST410 isolates.
The prevalence of CTX-M-15-producing isolates from non-human sources in Germany is still low. The blaCTX-M-15 gene is, however, present in multidrug-resistant E. coli clones with pathogenic potential in livestock and food. The maintenance of the blaCTX-M-15 gene due to chromosomal carriage is noteworthy. The possibility of an exchange of CTX-M-15-producing isolates or plasmids between livestock and humans (in both directions) deserves continuous surveillance.
- polymerase chain reaction
- plasmids
- cephalosporins
- aspergillus nuclease s1
- southern blot assay
- cattle
- chromosomes
- clone cells
- cucumis
- disease outbreaks
- disease transmission
- electrophoresis, gel, pulsed-field
- equidae
- food
- genes
- germany
- equus caballus
- meat
- replicon
- risk assessment
- salmon
- suidae
- toxins
- fowls, domestic
- poultry meat
- salmonella
- virulence
- dna microarrays
- escherichia coli
- surveillance, medical
- farm animals
- amplification
- toys
- farming environment