Incidence of antibiotic resistance genotypes of Vibrio species recovered from selected freshwaters in Southwest Nigeria
Vibrio species are classified as potent hazards because of their tendency to effect serious diseases like cholera and other gastrointestinal ailments in humans, as well as vibriosis in fish. A total of 144 freshwater samples were aseptically collected monthly across four rivers (Asejire, Ona, Dandar...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scientific reports 2022-11, Vol.12 (1), p.18912-11, Article 18912 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Vibrio
species are classified as potent hazards because of their tendency to effect serious diseases like cholera and other gastrointestinal ailments in humans, as well as vibriosis in fish. A total of 144 freshwater samples were aseptically collected monthly across four rivers (Asejire, Ona, Dandaru and Erinle rivers) over a 12-month period from which
Vibrio
spp. were isolated using culture procedures, confirmed by means of biochemical test as well as Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) assay and further characterized for their phenotypic antibiotic susceptibilities and relevant antimicrobial resistant determinants by PCR. Three hundred and fifteen (58%) isolates confirmed across the sampled sites (Asejire = 75, Dandaru = 87, Eleyele = 72, Erinle = 81) showed high resistance against erythromycin—95%, Sulphamethoxazole—94%, rifampicin—92%, doxycycline—82%, tetracycline—75%, amoxicillin—45%, cephalothin—43% and varied susceptibilities to other antibiotics. The multiple antibiotic resistance indices of 97% of the
Vibrio
isolates were above the 0.2 threshold limit with MAR phenotype pattern E-SUL-RF-TET-DOX (0.38) found to be the most prevalent pattern among the isolates. The distributions of resistance determinant of the tested antibiotics were revealed as follows:
sul
II 33%,
sul
I 19% (sulfonamides);
bla
OXA
27%,
amp
C 39%,
bla
pse
11% (beta-lactams);
tet
A 28%,
tet
E 20%,
tet
39 8%, (tetracyclines) and
strA
39%.
aacC
2 24%,
aphA
1 14% (aminoglycosides). Strong positive associations were observed among
tetA
,
sulI, tetE
and
sul
II. This study raises concerns as these selected rivers may contribute to the environmental spread of waterborne diseases and antibiotic resistance genes. Therefore, we recommend environmental context-tailored strategies for monitoring and surveillance of resistance genes so as to safeguard the environment from becoming reservoirs of virulent and infectious
Vibrio
species. |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41598-022-23479-0 |