Relatedness of Escherichia coli strains with different susceptibility phenotypes isolated from swine feces during ampicillin treatment. - Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier - Toulouse INP Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Applied and Environmental Microbiology Année : 2009

Relatedness of Escherichia coli strains with different susceptibility phenotypes isolated from swine feces during ampicillin treatment.

Résumé

The aim of this study was to examine the dynamics of the development of resistance in fecal Escherichia coli populations during treatment with ampicillin for 7 days in pigs. Before treatment, only 6% of the isolates were ampicillin resistant, whereas more than 90% of the isolates were resistant after days 4 and 7 of treatment. Ampicillin-resistant E. coli isolates were mainly multiresistant, and 53% of the isolates from the treated pigs had one phenotype that included resistance to six antibiotics (ampicillin, chloramphenicol, sulfonamides, tetracycline, trimethoprim, and streptomycin) at day 7. Determination of the frequency of the four phylogenetic groups showed that there was a shift in the E. coli population in ampicillin-treated pigs; before treatment 75% of the isolates belonged to phylogroup B1, whereas at day 7 85% of the isolates belonged to phylogroup A. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) typing revealed that ampicillin treatment selected ampicillin-resistant isolates with genotypes which were present before treatment. Comparison of antimicrobial phenotypes and PFGE genotypes showed that resistance traits were disseminated by vertical transmission through defined strains. One PFGE genotype, associated with the six-antibiotic-resistant phenotype and including a specific combination of resistance determinants, was predominant among the ampicillin-resistant strains before treatment and during treatment. These data indicate that ampicillin administration selected various ampicillin-resistant isolates that were present in the digestive tract before any treatment and that E. coli isolates belonging to one specific PFGE genotype encoding resistance to six antibiotics became the predominant strains as soon as ampicillin was present in the digestive tract.

Domaines

Pharmacologie
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Dates et versions

hal-00517533 , version 1 (16-09-2010)

Identifiants

Citer

Delphine Bibbal, Véronique Dupouy-Guiraute, Marie-Françoise Prère, Pierre-Louis Toutain, Alain Bousquet‐mélou. Relatedness of Escherichia coli strains with different susceptibility phenotypes isolated from swine feces during ampicillin treatment.. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 2009, 75 (10), pp.2999-3006. ⟨10.1128/AEM.02143-08⟩. ⟨hal-00517533⟩
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