Affiliation:
1. Department of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, Section for Veterinary Clinical Microbiology, University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg C, Denmark
2. Department of Molecular Medicine Sapienza, University of Rome, Rome, Italy
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Neomycin is the first-choice antibiotic for the treatment of porcine enteritis caused by enterotoxigenic
Escherichia coli
. Resistance to this aminoglycoside is on the rise after the increased use of neomycin due to the ban on zinc oxide. We identified the neomycin resistance determinants and plasmid contents in a historical collection of 128 neomycin-resistant clinical
E. coli
isolates from Danish pig farms. All isolates were characterized by whole-genome sequencing and antimicrobial susceptibility testing, followed by conjugation experiments and long-read sequencing of eight selected representative strains. We detected 35 sequence types (STs) with ST100 being the most prevalent lineage (38.3%). Neomycin resistance was associated with two resistance genes, namely
aph(3
′
)-Ia
and
aph(3′)-Ib
, which were identified in 93% and 7% of the isolates, respectively. The
aph(3′)-Ia
was found on different large conjugative plasmids belonging to IncI1α, which was present in 67.2% of the strains, on IncHI1, IncHI2, and IncN, as well as on a multicopy ColRNAI plasmid. All these plasmids except ColRNAI carried genes encoding resistance to other antimicrobials or heavy metals, highlighting the risk of co-selection. The
aph(3′)-Ib
gene occurred on a 19 kb chimeric, mobilizable plasmid that contained elements tracing back its origin to distantly related genera. While
aph(3′)-Ia
was flanked by either Tn
903
or Tn
4352
derivatives, no clear association was observed between
aph(3′)-Ib
and mobile genetic elements. In conclusion, the spread of neomycin resistance in porcine clinical
E. coli
is driven by two resistance determinants located on distinct plasmid scaffolds circulating within a highly diverse population dominated by ST100.
IMPORTANCE
Neomycin is the first-choice antibiotic for the management of
Escherichia coli
enteritis in pigs. This work shows that
aph(3
′
)-Ia
and to a lesser extent
aph(3′)-Ib
are responsible for the spread of neomycin resistance that has been recently observed among pig clinical isolates and elucidates the mechanisms of dissemination of these two resistance determinants. The
aph(3′)-Ia gene
is located on different conjugative plasmid scaffolds and is associated with two distinct transposable elements (Tn
903
and Tn
4352
) that contributed to its spread. The diffusion of
aph(3′)-Ib
is mediated by a small non-conjugative, mobilizable chimeric plasmid that likely derived from distantly related members of the
Pseudomonadota
phylum and was not associated with any detectable mobile genetic element. Although the spread of neomycin resistance is largely attributable to horizontal transfer, both resistance determinants have been acquired by a predominant lineage (ST100) associated with enterotoxigenic
E. coli
, which accounted for approximately one-third of the strains.
Funder
mfvm | Fødevarestyrelsens
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
1 articles.
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