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. 2007 Jan;73(1):156-63.
doi: 10.1128/AEM.01551-06. Epub 2006 Nov 10.

Antimicrobial-resistant enteric bacteria from dairy cattle

Affiliations

Antimicrobial-resistant enteric bacteria from dairy cattle

Ashish A Sawant et al. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2007 Jan.

Abstract

A study was conducted to understand the descriptive and molecular epidemiology of antimicrobial-resistant gram-negative enteric bacteria in the feces of healthy lactating dairy cattle. Gram-negative enteric bacteria resistant to ampicillin, florfenicol, spectinomycin, and tetracycline were isolated from the feces of 35, 8, 5, and 42% of 213 lactating cattle on 74, 39, 9, 26, and 82% of 23 farms surveyed, respectively. Antimicrobial-resistant gram-negative bacteria accounted for 5 (florfenicol) to 14% (tetracycline) of total gram-negative enteric microflora. Nine bacterial species were isolated, of which Escherichia coli (87%) was the most predominant species. MICs showing reduced susceptibility to ampicillin, ceftiofur, chloramphenicol, florfenicol, spectinomycin, streptomycin, and tetracycline were observed in E. coli isolates. Isolates exhibited resistance to ampicillin (48%), ceftiofur (11%), chloramphenicol (20%), florfenicol (78%), spectinomycin (18%), and tetracycline (93%). Multidrug resistance (> or =3 to 6 antimicrobials) was seen in 40% of E. coli isolates from healthy lactating cattle. Of 113 tetracycline-resistant E. coli isolates, tet(B) was the predominant resistance determinant and was detected in 93% of isolates, while the remaining 7% isolates carried the tet(A) determinant. DNA-DNA hybridization assays revealed that tet determinants were located on the chromosome. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis revealed that tetracycline-resistant E. coli isolates (n = 99 isolates) belonged to 60 subtypes, which is suggestive of a highly diverse population of tetracycline-resistant organisms. On most occasions, E. coli subtypes, although shared between cows within the herd, were confined mostly to a dairy herd. The findings of this study suggest that commensal enteric E. coli from healthy lactating cattle can be an important reservoir for tetracycline and perhaps other antimicrobial resistance determinants.

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Figures

FIG. 1.
FIG. 1.
MICs of 223 E. coli isolates for seven antimicrobials. The resistance breakpoints are based on CLSI interpretative criteria (39).
FIG. 1.
FIG. 1.
MICs of 223 E. coli isolates for seven antimicrobials. The resistance breakpoints are based on CLSI interpretative criteria (39).
FIG. 2.
FIG. 2.
Southern hybridization of genomic DNA with tet(B) probe. (A) Lanes 1 to 10 represent PFGE genomic DNA fragments. (B) Blot of PFGE genomic DNA probed with tet(B) probe. The Salmonella serovar Newport (Sb) PFGE reference strain (XbaI-digested genomic DNA fragments) is tetracycline sensitive and served as a negative control.

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