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Genome-Based Characterization of Multidrug-Resistant Escherichia coli Isolated from Clinical Bovine Mastitis

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Alves, Taila dos Santos ; Rosa, Vinicius Sanches ; Leite, Domingos da Silva ; Guerra, Simony Trevizan ; Joaquim, Samea Fernandes ; Guimaraes, Felipe Freitas ; Pantoja, Jose Carlos de Figueiredo ; Lucheis, Simoni Baldini ; Rall, Vera Lucia Mores ; Hernandes, Rodrigo Tavanelli ; Langoni, Helio ; Ribeiro, Marcio Garcia
Número total de Autores: 12
Tipo de documento: Artigo Científico
Fonte: Current Microbiology; v. 80, n. 3, p. 7-pg., 2023-03-01.
Resumo

Mastitis occurrence in dairy cows is a broad topic that involves several sectors, from antimicrobial resistance and virulence of strains to economic implications and cattle management practices. Here, we assessed the molecular characterization (antimicrobial resistance determinants, virulence genes, sequences type, serotypes, and plasmid types) of 178 Escherichia coli strains isolated from milk samples from cows with clinical mastitis using a genome-based k-mers approach. Of these, 53 (29.8%) showed multidrug resistance by disc diffusion. We selected eight multidrug-resistant mastitis-associated E. coli for whole-genome sequencing and molecular characterization based on raw data using k-mers. We assessed antimicrobial resistance genes, virulence factors, serotypes, Multilocus Sequence Typing (MLST), and plasmid types. The most antimicrobial resistance gene found were bla(TEM-1B) (7/8), tetA (6/8), strA (6/8), strB (6/8), and qnrB19 (5/8). A total of 25 virulence factors were detected encoding adhesins, capsule, enzymes/proteins, increased serum survival, hemolysin, colicins, and iron uptake. These virulence factors were associated with Extraintestinal Pathogenic E. coli. Three pandemic clones were found: ST10, ST101, and ST69. Two E. coli were assigned in the O117 serogroup and one in the O8:H25 serotype. The most common plasmid groups were IncFII (7/8) and IncFIB (6/8). Our findings contribute to the knowledge of virulence mechanisms, epidemiological aspects, and antimicrobial resistance determinants of E. coli strains obtained from clinical mammary infections of cows. (AU)

Processo FAPESP: 15/19688-8 - E. coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae e Enterococcus spp: impacto dos fatores de virulência na mastite bovina e reflexos na saúde pública
Beneficiário:Helio Langoni
Modalidade de apoio: Auxílio à Pesquisa - Temático