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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Many calls have been made to address antibiotic resistance in an environmental perspective. With this study, we showed the widespread presence of high-level antibiotic resistant isolates on a collection of non-susceptible Gram-negative bacteria (n = 232) recovered from soils. Bacteria were selected using amoxicillin, cefotaxime and imipenem, from sites representing different agricultural practices (extensive, intensive and organic). Striking levels of non-susceptibility were noticed in intensive soils for norfloxacin (74%), streptomycin (50.7%) and tetracycline (46.6%); indeed, the exposure to intensive agricultural practices constituted a risk factor for non-susceptibility to many antibiotics, multidrug resistance and production of extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBL). Analyses of non-susceptibility highlighted that environmental and clinical bacteria from the same species might not share the same intrinsic resistance patterns, raising concerns for therapy choices in environment-borne infections. The multiple sequence-type IncI1-driven spread of penicillinases (blaTEM-1 , blaTEM-135 ), ESBL (blaSHV-12 and blaCTX-M-1 ) and plasmid-mediated AmpC β-lactamases (blaCMY-2 ), produced by isolates that share their molecular features with isolates from humans and animals, suggests contamination of agricultural soils. This is also the first appearance of IncI1/ST28-harbouring blaCTX-M-1 , which should be monitored to prevent their establishment as successfully dispersed plasmids. This research may help disclose paths of contamination by mobile antibiotic resistance determinants and the risks for their dissemination.
Description
This work was presented as an oral communication
at the 25th European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and
Infectious Diseases in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Keywords
Resistência aos Antibióticos IncI1-bearing ESBL and PMAβ Farming soil
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Environ Microbiol. 2016 Jan;18(1):260-72. doi: 10.1111/1462-2920.13021. Epub 2015 Oct 14.
Publisher
wiley/ Society for Applied Microbiology
