Affiliation:
1. Department of Veterinary Science, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Healthy calves (
n
= 96, 1 to 9 weeks old) from a dairy herd in central Pennsylvania were examined each month over a five-month period for fecal shedding of ceftiofur-resistant gram-negative bacteria. Ceftiofur-resistant
Escherichia coli
isolates (
n
= 122) were characterized by antimicrobial resistance (disk diffusion and MIC), serotype, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis subtypes, beta-lactamase genes, and virulence genes. Antibiotic disk diffusion assays showed that the isolates were resistant to ampicillin (100%), ceftiofur (100%), chloramphenicol (94%), florfenicol (93%), gentamicin (89%), spectinomycin (72%), tetracycline (98%), ticarcillin (99%), and ticarcillin-clavulanic acid (99%). All isolates were multidrug resistant and displayed elevated MICs. The
E. coli
isolates belonged to 42 serotypes, of which O8:H25 was the predominant serotype (49.2%). Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis classified the
E. coli
isolates into 27 profiles. Cluster analysis showed that 77 isolates (63.1%) belonged to one unique group. The prevalence of pathogenic
E. coli
was low (8%). A total of 117 ceftiofur-resistant
E. coli
isolates (96%) possessed the
bla
CMY2
gene. Based on phenotypic and genotypic characterization, the ceftiofur-resistant
E. coli
isolates belonged to 59 clonal types. There was no significant relationship between calf age and clonal type. The findings of this study revealed that healthy dairy calves were rapidly colonized by antibiotic-resistant strains of
E. coli
shortly after birth. The high prevalence of multidrug-resistant nonpathogenic
E. coli
in calves could be a significant source of resistance genes to other bacteria that share the same environment.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
98 articles.
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