Journal
POULTRY SCIENCE
Volume 101, Issue 4, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.psj.2022.101710
Keywords
P. mirabilis; multidrug-resistant; bla(NDM-1); virulence gene
Categories
Funding
- Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province [ZR2020MC181]
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This study investigated the prevalence and antimicrobial resistance characteristics of Proteus mirabilis (P. mirabilis) in conventional broiler-fattening farms in Shandong Province, China. The results showed that the P. mirabilis strains isolated from these farms displayed a high level of antimicrobial resistance and carried multiple drug-resistance genes. The study suggested that P. mirabilis strains in Shandong may pose a potential risk to humans.
Animal-derived Proteus mirabilis (P. mirabilis) is an important food-borne zoonotic bacillus and widely exists in the broiler-breeding industry. The present study was designed to explore the P. mirabilis prevalence and antimicrobial resistance characteristics in 6 conventional broiler-fattening farms in Shandong Province, China. The overall isolation rate of P. mirabilis was 7.07% (50/707). Antimicrobial resistance was very common in the P. mirabilis isolated from these farms and varied for different antibacterial drugs, with chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole having the highest resistance rate (98%) and aztreonam the lowest (0%). Multidrug resistance was as high as 100%. The majority of the MDR isolates were resistant to between 9 and 12 of the antibiotics, with these accounting for 76% (38/50) of multidrug resistant strains. These P. mirabilis isolates carried 24 drug-resistance genes in 6 types, with stcM having the highest rate (96%) and cmlA, bla(TEM), and qnrC the lowest (2%). Superdrug resistance gene bla(NDM-1) was found in 10% (5/ 50) of isolates from poultry farms in Shandong. All the P. mirabilis isolates carried at least 6 virulence genes, with 100% detection rates of the ireA and hpmA genes. Our study revealed that the P. mirabilis strains isolated in the Shandong area all showed the MDR phenotype and the poultry-derived carbapenem-resistant MDR P. mirabilis strains may pose a potential risk to humans. Surveillance findings presented herein will be conducive to our understanding of the prevalence and characteristics of carbapenem-resistant P. mirabilis strains in Shandong, China.
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