1. Characterization of Oxacillin-Susceptible mecA -Positive Staphylococcus aureus from Food Poisoning Outbreaks and Retail Foods in China.
- Author
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Zhang P, Miao X, Zhou L, Cui B, Zhang J, Xu X, Wu C, Peng X, and Wang X
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, China epidemiology, Disease Outbreaks, Drug Resistance, Bacterial, Food Contamination, Food Microbiology, Genes, Bacterial, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Multilocus Sequence Typing, Staphylococcus aureus drug effects, Oxacillin pharmacology, Staphylococcal Food Poisoning epidemiology, Staphylococcus aureus isolation & purification
- Abstract
In this study, we explored the prevalence of oxacillin-susceptible mecA -positive Staphylococcus aureus (OS-MRSA) in staphylococcal food poisoning outbreak isolates and foodborne isolates, and then investigated their molecular characteristics, classical staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEs), and drug resistance. Eight (2.9%) of 275 isolates from food poisoning outbreaks and 7 (3.8%) of 184 isolates from retail foods were identified as OS-MRSA isolates. Among the 15 OS-MRSA isolates, the most frequently detected toxin genes were hld (100%), hla (93.3%), pvl (80.0%), and hlb (46.7%) followed by seg and seq (33.3%, each), hlg (26.7%), seb and hlgv (20.0%, each), sec , seh , sel , sep , and tst (13.3%, each), and sei , sem , sen , and seo (6.7%, each). None of isolates carried other tested virulence genes. The most frequently detected classical SEs were SEB and SEC (26.7%, each), followed by SEA and SEE (20.0%, each), and SED (6.7%). Resistance was most frequently observed in ampicillin, penicillin, and cefoxitin (100%, each), followed by trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (93.3%), erythromycin (73.3%), amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (46.7%), tetracyclines (26.7%), and ciprofloxacin (6.7%). All isolates were susceptible to other tested antibiotics. A dominant molecular type belonged to ST398-IVa-t034 (26.7%), followed by ST59-IVa-t437 (20.0%), ST88-III-t14340 and ST1-IVa-t114 (13.3%, each), and ST5-II-t002, ST630-t4549, ST5-II, and ST4495-t10738 (6.7%, each). Our findings indicated that OS-MRSA strains had a low prevalence rate among outbreak strains and foodborne strains, which frequently harbored SCCmec IVa, and carried a variety of toxin genes, and also expressed numerous classical SEs. In addition, all OS-MRSA isolates were susceptible to the majority of antibacterial agents except β -lactam. Our study is the first to report that OS-MRSA isolates are associated with food poisoning outbreaks worldwide.
- Published
- 2020
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