4.6 Article

Heterogeneity and transmission of food safety-related enterotoxigenic Staphylococcus aureus in pig abattoirs in Hubei, China

Journal

MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/spectrum.01913-23

Keywords

Staphylococcus aureus; food safety; heterogeneity; transmission; genomic epidemiology

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This study conducted a systematic genomic epidemiology research on the prevalence, heterogeneity, and transmission of Staphylococcus aureus in pig abattoirs in Hubei province, China. The findings revealed substantial heterogeneity between S. aureus recovered from different locations within the slaughter process and transmission across different slaughter stages. The study also highlighted the higher prevalence, antimicrobial resistance, and pathogenicity of upstream isolates compared to downstream isolates.
The dissemination of Staphylococcus aureus in the pork production chain is a major food safety concern. Abattoirs can serve both as disruptor and transmitter for S. aureus. In this study, we conducted a systematic genomic epidemiology research on the prevalence, heterogeneity, and transmission of S. aureus in 3,638 samples collected from four pig abattoirs in Hubei province, China. Our findings revealed substantial heterogeneity between S. aureus recovered from samples collected at upstream (from stunning step to head-removal step) and downstream (from splitting step to chilling step) locations within the slaughter process. Overall, 966 (26.6%) samples were positive for S. aureus, with significantly higher overall prevalence for upstream samples (29.0%, 488/1,681) compared to downstream samples (24.4%, 478/1,957). Antimicrobial susceptibility testing demonstrated that the isolates from the upstream exhibited significantly higher resistance proportions to different antimicrobials than those from the downstream. Whole-genome sequencing of 126 isolates revealed that ST398 (32.9%, 23/70) and ST9 (22.9%, 16/70) were more common among upstream isolates, while ST7 (35.7%, 20/56) and ST97 (28.6%, 16/56) were most frequently observed among downstream isolates. Additionally, molecular characterization analysis demonstrated that upstream isolates possessed significantly higher enterotoxigenic potential, more antimicrobial resistance genes, and S. aureus pathogenicity islands than downstream isolates. Notably, we discovered that enterotoxigenic S. aureus could be transmitted across different slaughter stages, with knives, water, and air serving as vectors. Although slaughtering processes had a substantial effect on reducing the food safety risk posed by enterotoxigenic S. aureus, the possibility of its widespread transmission should not be disregarded.

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