4.2 Article

Genomic analysis of Escherichia coli circulating in the Brazilian poultry sector

Journal

BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 4, Pages 2121-2131

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s42770-022-00799-x

Keywords

Food-producing animals; Antimicrobial resistance; Virulence; WGS

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The study reveals the presence of a variety of antimicrobial resistance genes in Escherichia coli strains circulating in the Brazilian poultry sector, which pose a potential threat to human and animal health. Additionally, the strains show high genomic diversity.
Escherichia coli are gut commensal bacteria and opportunistic pathogens, and the emergence of antimicrobial resistance threatens the safety of the food chain. To know the E. coli strains circulating in the Brazilian poultry sector is important since the country corresponds to a significant chicken meat production. Thus, we analyzed 90 publicly genomes available in a database using web-based tools. Genomic analysis revealed that sul alleles were the most detected resistance genes, followed by aadA, bla(CTX-M), and dfrA. Plasmids of the IncF family were important, followed by IncI1-I alpha, Col-like, and p0111. Genes of specific metabolic pathways that contribute to virulence (terC and gad) were predominant, followed by sitA, traT, and iss. Additionally, pap, usp, vat, sfa/foc, ibeA, cnf1, eae, and sat were also predicted. In this regard, 11 E. coli were characterized as avian pathogenic E. coli and one as atypical enteropathogenic E. coli. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed the predominant occurrence of B1 but also A, D, B2, F, E, G, C, and Clade I phylogroups, whereas international clones ST38, ST73, ST117, ST155, and ST224 were predicted among 53 different sequence types identified. Serotypes O6:H1 and:H25 were prevalent, and fimH31 and fimH32 were the most representatives among the 36 FimH types detected. Finally, single nucleotide polymorphisms-based phylogenetic analysis confirmed high genomic diversity among E. coli strains. While international E. coli clones have adapted to the Brazilian poultry sector, the virulome background of these strains support a pathogenic potential to humans and animals, with lineages carrying resistance genes that can lead to hard-to-treat infections.

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