Affiliation:
1. Freshwater Biological Association1 and
2. Laboratorium voor Microbiologie, Universiteit Ghent, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium2; and
3. Fish Disease Laboratory, Department of Microbiology, National University of Ireland, Galway, Republic of Ireland3
4. Institute of Freshwater Ecology,4 Far Sawrey, Ambleside, Cumbria LA22 OLP, United Kingdom;
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Oxytetracycline-resistant (OT
r
) mesophilic aeromonads were recovered from untreated hospital effluent (72 isolates) and from fish farm hatchery tanks (91 isolates) at sites within the English Lake District, Cumbria, England. The transfer of OT
r
plasmids from these isolates was investigated. Using
Escherichia coli
J53-1 as a recipient, 11 isolates from the hospital site and 6 isolates from the fish farm site transferred OT
r
plasmids (designated pFBAOT1 to 17). Original isolates were identified using fatty acid methyl ester and fluorescent amplified fragment length polymorphism comparisons as either
Aeromonas hydrophila
HG3 (eight isolates),
A. veronii
b.v. sobria HG8 (six isolates), and
A. caviae
HGB5 (one isolate). One isolate remained unidentified, and one could not be assigned a taxonomic designation beyond the genus level. Plasmids pFBAOT1 to -17 were screened for the presence of the tetracycline resistance determinants Tet A to E and Tet G. Only determinant Tet A (10 plasmids) was detected in these plasmids, with 7
tet
gene determinants remaining unclassified. In all cases, Tet A was located on a 5.5-kb
Eco
RI restriction fragment. Hybridization with
inc-rep
probes N, P, Q, W, and U showed pFBAOT3, -4, -5, -6, -7, -9, and -11, from the hospital environment, to be IncU plasmids. Further, restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analyses and DNA probing demonstrated that pFBAOT plasmids were closely related to IncU OT
r
plasmids pASOT, pASOT2, pASOT3, pRAS1 (originally isolated from
A. salmonicida
strains from fish farms in Scotland and Norway, respectively), and pIE420 (isolated from a German hospital
E. coli
strain). In addition, DNA analyses demonstrated that plasmids pRAS1 and pIE420 had identical RFLP profiles and that all fragments hybridized to each other. The presence of tetracycline resistance transposon Tn
1721
in its entirety or in a truncated form in these plasmids was demonstrated. These results provided direct evidence that related tetracycline resistance-encoding plasmids have disseminated between different
Aeromonas
species and
E. coli
and between the human and aquaculture environments in distinct geographical locations. Collectively, these findings provide evidence to support the hypothesis that the aquaculture and human compartments of the environment behave as a single interactive compartment.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology