4.6 Article

Increased Prevalence of Salmonella Infantis Isolated from Raw Chicken and Turkey Products in the United States Is Due to a Single Clonal Lineage Carrying the pESI Plasmid

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10071478

Keywords

Salmonella Infantis; pESI plasmid; poultry

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service [6040-32000-077-000-D, 6040-32000-079-000-D]
  2. USDA ARS Headquarters Postdoctoral Fellowship

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S. Infantis has become a common serotype of Salmonella in the U.S., with most isolates carrying the pESI plasmid. Chromosomal differences were found between plasmid carriage groups, but no unique genes were identified. Isolates with the plasmid had more insertion sequences on average. This suggests that the proliferation of S. Infantis carrying the pESI plasmid is due to a single clonal strain that may have advantages in poultry or their environment.
Infantis has recently become one of the most common serotypes of Salmonella isolated in the U.S. from raw meat samples collected in processing facilities and in retail stores. Investigations have determined that the majority of these isolates contain the pESI plasmid, but there has not been a large-scale investigation of the chromosome of these isolates. Here, we investigated 3276 whole-genome sequences of Salmonella Infantis with and without the pESI plasmid to understand chromosomal differences between plasmid carriage groups. S. Infantis genomes arranged into multiple clades with a single clade containing the isolates carrying the plasmid. Fifty-eight SNPs were identified in complete linkage disequilibrium between isolates that did and did not carry the plasmid. However, there were no unique genes present only in the genomes of isolates containing the plasmid. On average, isolates with the plasmid did contain more insertion sequences than those without (p < 0.05). Given that S. Infantis isolates carrying pESI form a single clade, it can be inferred that the increase in carriage of this plasmid in the U.S. is due to rapid clonal expansion of a single strain rather than as a result of multiple transfer events. As this S. Infantis clone does not contain any unique chromosomal genes, its proliferation appears to be due to pESI plasmid-encoded genes that may be advantageous in the chickens and turkeys or in their environment.

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