4.6 Article

High-Resolution Genotyping Unveils Identical Ampicillin-Resistant Enterococcus faecium Strains in Different Sources and Countries: A One Health Approach

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10030632

Keywords

Enterococcus faecium; hospital; ampicillin resistance; surveillance; genomics; One Health

Categories

Funding

  1. CT-Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia, I.P. [UIDP/04378/2020, UIDB/04378/2020]
  2. Associate Laboratory Institute for Health and Bioeconomy-i4HB [LA/P/0140/2020]
  3. AgriFood XXI IDI project [NORTE01-0145-FEDER-000041]
  4. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) through NORTE 2020 (Programa Operacional Regional do Norte 2014/2020)
  5. FCT/MCTES [CEECIND/02268/2017, UI/BD/151317/2021]
  6. ISCIII [CD18/00123]
  7. ERDF/ESF, A way to make Europe/Investing in your future
  8. [EXPL/SAU-INF/0261/2021]
  9. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [EXPL/SAU-INF/0261/2021, UI/BD/151317/2021] Funding Source: FCT

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Through genomic analysis, researchers identified multidrug-resistant Enterococcus faecium strains causing human infections in Tunisian healthcare institutions. These strains were compared with non-human sources within the same country, revealing their spread across different hosts and regions with similar antibiotic resistance and virulence genetic patterns.
Multidrug-resistant (MDR) Enterococcus faecium (Efm) infections continue to increase worldwide, although epidemiological studies remain scarce in lower middle-income countries. We aimed to explore which strains circulate in E. faecium causing human infections in Tunisian healthcare institutions in order to compare them with strains from non-human sources of the same country and finally to position them within the global E. faecium epidemiology by genomic analysis. Antibiotic susceptibility testing was performed and transfer of vancomycin-vanA and ampicillin-pbp5 resistance was performed by conjugation. WGS-Illumina was performed on Tunisian strains, and these genomes were compared with Efm genomes from other regions present in the GenBank/NCBI database (n = 10,701 Efm genomes available May 2021). A comparison of phenotypes with those predicted by the recent ResFinder 4.1-CGE webtool unveiled a concordance of 88%, with discordant cases being discussed. cgMLST revealed three clusters [ST18/CT222 (n = 13), ST17/CT948 strains (n = 6), and ST203/CT184 (n = 3)], including isolates from clinical, healthy-human, retail meat, and/or environmental sources in different countries over large time spans (10-12 years). Isolates within each cluster showed similar antibiotic resistance, bacteriocin, and virulence genetic patterns. pbp5-AmpR was transferred by VanA-AmpR-ST80 (clinical) and AmpR-ST17-Efm (bovine meat). Identical chromosomal pbp5-platforms carrying metabolic/virulence genes were identified between ST17/ST18 strains of clinical, farm animal, and retail meat sources. The overall results emphasize the role of high-resolution genotyping as provided by WGS in depicting the dispersal of MDR-Efm strains carrying relevant adaptive traits across different hosts/regions and the need of a One Health task force to curtail their spread.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available