4.4 Article

Local and Environmental Reservoirs of Salmonella enterica After Hurricane Florence Flooding

Journal

GEOHEALTH
Volume 7, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2023GH000877

Keywords

Salmonella; long-read; whole-genome sequencing; flood; mobile genetic element

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This study investigates the origin and distribution of Salmonella enterica after the 2018 Hurricane Florence flooding using high-resolution whole genomic sequencing. The results show that the S. enterica strains isolated from water samples near swine farms in North Carolina are closely related to environmental strains previously isolated from the southeastern US. Furthermore, the study identifies a significant number of antibiotic resistance genes in the isolates.
In many regions of the world, including the United States, human and animal fecal genetic markers have been found in flood waters. In this study, we use high-resolution whole genomic sequencing to examine the origin and distribution of Salmonella enterica after the 2018 Hurricane Florence flooding. We specifically asked whether S. enterica isolated from water samples collected near swine farms in North Carolina shortly after Hurricane Florence had evidence of swine origin. To investigate this, we isolated and fully sequenced 18 independent S. enterica strains from 10 locations (five flooded and five unflooded). We found that all strains have extremely similar chromosomes with only five single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and possessed two plasmids assigned bioinformatically to the incompatibility groups IncFIB and IncFII. The chromosomal core genome and the IncFIB plasmid are most closely related to environmental Salmonella strains isolated previously from the southeastern US. In contrast, the IncFII plasmid was found in environmental S. enterica strains whose genomes were more divergent, suggesting the IncFII plasmid is more promiscuous than the IncFIB type. We identified 65 antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in each of our 18 S. enterica isolates. All ARGs were located on the Salmonella chromosome, similar to other previously characterized environmental isolates. All isolates with different SNPs were resistant to a panel of commonly used antibiotics. These results highlight the importance of environmental sources of antibiotic-resistant S. enterica after extreme flood events.

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