Natural Horizontal Gene Transfer of Antimicrobial Resistance Genes in Campylobacter spp. From Turkeys and Swine
Antibiotic-resistant Campylobacter constitutes a serious threat to public health. The clonal expansion of resistant strains and/or the horizontal spread of resistance genes to other strains and species can hinder the clinical effectiveness of antibiotics to treat severe campylobacteriosis. Still, ga...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Frontiers in microbiology 2021-09, Vol.12, p.732969-732969 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Antibiotic-resistant
Campylobacter
constitutes a serious threat to public health. The clonal expansion of resistant strains and/or the horizontal spread of resistance genes to other strains and species can hinder the clinical effectiveness of antibiotics to treat severe campylobacteriosis. Still, gaps exist in our understanding of the risks of acquisition and spread of antibiotic resistance in
Campylobacter
. While the
in vitro
transfer of antimicrobial resistance genes between
Campylobacter
species
via
natural transformation has been extensively demonstrated, experimental studies have favored the use of naked DNA to obtain transformants. In this study, we used experimental designs closer to real-world conditions to evaluate the possible transfer of antimicrobial resistance genes between
Campylobacter
strains of the same or different species (
Campylobacter coli
or
Campylobacter jejuni
) and originating from different animal hosts (swine or turkeys). This was evaluated
in vitro
through co-culture experiments and
in vivo
with dual-strain inoculation of turkeys, followed by whole genome sequencing of parental and newly emerged strains.
In vitro
, we observed four independent horizontal gene transfer events leading to the acquisition of resistance to beta-lactams (
blaOXA
), aminoglycosides [
aph(2′′)-If
and
rpsL
] and tetracycline [
tet(O)
]. Observed events involved the displacement of resistance-associated genes by a mutated version, or the acquisition of genomic islands harboring a resistance determinant by homologous recombination; we did not detect the transfer of resistance-carrying plasmids even though they were present in some strains.
In vivo
, we recovered a newly emerged strain with dual-resistance pattern and identified the replacement of an existing non-functional
tet(O)
by a functional
tet(O)
in the recipient strain. Whole genome comparisons allowed characterization of the events involved in the horizontal spread of resistance genes between
Campylobacter
following
in vitro
co-culture and
in vivo
dual inoculation. Our study also highlights the potential for antimicrobial resistance transfer across
Campylobacter
species originating from turkeys and swine, which may have implications for farms hosting both species in close proximity. |
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ISSN: | 1664-302X 1664-302X |
DOI: | 10.3389/fmicb.2021.732969 |