1. Class 1 integrons in clinical and swine industry isolates of Salmonella Typhimurium from Colombia, dating 1997 to 2017.
- Author
-
Flórez-Delgado NY, Ubillus EN, Perez-Sepulveda B, Ospina-Ríos EL, Carrascal-Camacho AK, Chamorro-Tobar IC, Montaño LA, Li Y, Zapata-Bedoya S, Hinton JCD, Villarreal JM, and Wiesner M
- Subjects
- Swine, Animals, Humans, Salmonella typhimurium genetics, Integrons genetics, Colombia epidemiology, Multilocus Sequence Typing, Phylogeny, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial genetics, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Salmonella Infections, Animal, Salmonella enterica genetics
- Abstract
Background. Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Typhimurium ( S . Typhimurium) has been linked to outbreaks of foodborne gastroenteritis disease, and the emergence of antimicrobial-resistant clones. In Colombia, laboratory surveillance of Salmonella spp. between 1997-2018 revealed that S . Typhimurium was the most ubiquitous serovar (27.6 % of all Salmonella isolates), with increasing levels of resistance to several families of antibiotics. Hypothesis. Resistant isolates of S . Typhimurium recovered from human clinical, food and swine samples carry class 1 integrons that are linked to antimicrobial resistance genes. Aim. Identify class 1 integrons, and investigate their association with other mobile genetic elements, and their relationship to the antimicrobial resistance of Colombian S . Typhimurium isolates. Methods. In this study, 442 isolates of S . Typhimurium were analysed, of which 237 were obtained from blood culture, 151 from other clinical sources, 4 from non-clinical sources and 50 from swine samples. Class 1 integrons and plasmid incompatibility groups were analysed by PCR and whole-genome sequencing (WGS), and regions flanking integrons were identified by WGS. The phylogenetic relationship was established by multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) distances for 30 clinical isolates. Results . Overall, 39 % (153/392) of the human clinical isolates and 22 % (11/50) of the swine S . Typhimurium isolates carried complete class 1 integrons. Twelve types of gene cassette arrays were identified, including dfr7-aac-bla
OXA-2 (Int1-Col1), which was the most common one in human clinical isolates (75.2 %, 115/153). Human clinical and swine isolates that carried class 1 integrons were resistant to up to five and up to three antimicrobial families, respectively. The Int1-Col1 integron was most prevalent in stool isolates and was associated with Tn 21 . The most common plasmid incompatibility group was IncA/C. Conclusions. The widespread presence of the IntI1-Col1 integron in Colombia since 1997 was striking. A possible relationship between integrons, source and mobile elements that favour the spread of antimicrobial resistance determinants in Colombian S . Typhimurium was identified.- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF