Pathogenicity determinants and antibiotic resistance profiles of enterococci from foods of animal origin in Turkey
Autor: | Nilay Çöplü, Recep Cibik, Hüsniye Şimşek, Gül Ece Soyutemiz, Tülay Elal Muş, Figen Çetinkaya |
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Přispěvatelé: | Uludağ Üniversitesi/Keles Meslek Yüksekokulu/Gıda İşleme Bölümü., Uludağ Üniversitesi/Veteriner Fakültesi/Gıda Hijyeni ve Teknolojisi Anabilim Dalı., Muş, Tülay Elal, Çetinkaya, Figen, Çibik, Recep, Soyutemiz, Gül Ece, K-1637-2017, AAW-5282-2020, AAI-1993-2021 |
Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Veterinary sciences
0301 basic medicine Turkey Antibiotic resistance medicine.medical_treatment Dalfopristin Antimicrobial resistance Gene Poultry chemistry.chemical_compound Prevalence Antiinfective agent Species distribution Virulence factors biology Incidence Bovine Microbial sensitivity test Faecalis Enterococci Antibiotic Resistance Enterococcus Faecalis Anti-Bacterial Agents Dairy product Ciprofloxacin Pcr Streptomycin Products Food control medicine.drug Meat 030106 microbiology Microbial Sensitivity Tests Microbiology Enterococcus faecalis 03 medical and health sciences Vancomycin Drug Resistance Bacterial medicine Animals Drug effects General Veterinary Animal Quinupristin biochemical phenomena metabolism and nutrition biology.organism_classification Enterococcus chemistry Food Virulence genes Linezolid Food Microbiology Cattle Fermented meat Dairy Products |
Zdroj: | Acta veterinaria Hungarica. 65(4) |
ISSN: | 0236-6290 |
Popis: | In this study, the presence of genes responsible for the pathogenicity and antibiotic resistance profile of enterococci isolated from various foodstuffs of animal origin was investigated. The percentage prevalence of enterococci was 54.1% (203/375) and the average count was found to be 3.81 log cfu/ml-g. Species-specific primers revealed Enterococcus faecalis as the predominant species carrying one or more virulence-associated traits of efa, gelE, ace, esp and agg genetic markers. Only one E. faecium isolate (from milk) was positive for the esp gene. Regarding antibiotic resistance, the highest frequency of resistance was observed for tetracycline (21.7%), followed by quinupristin/dalfopristin (13.3%), ciprofloxacin (2.0%), penicillin (2.0%), linezolid (1.0%), ampicillin (1.0%), streptomycin (1.0%), and gentamicin (0.5%). Enterococcus faecalis showed a higher prevalence of antibiotic resistance than other enterococci. The percentage of multidrug resistance among the isolates was 3.4%. Twenty-nine E. faecalis isolates (26.6%) carrying one of the virulence-associated traits were at the same time resistant to at least one antibiotic. Our results show that foods of animal origin, including ready-to-eat products, may be reservoirs of antibiotic-resistant and potentially virulent enterococci. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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