1. Survival of Antimicrobial Resistant Salmonella Heidelberg Inoculated into Microcosms of Fresh Pine Wood Shavings for Broiler Litter.
- Author
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Oladeinde A, Cook K, Rehman A, Carrillo CD, Woyda R, Wiersma C, Abdo Z, Johnson J, Bosch AM, Rothrock M, and Diarra M
- Abstract
This study applied genomic characterizations to a cocktail of three Salmonella enterica serovar Heidelberg (S. Heidelberg) strains different antimicrobial resistance (AMR) profile which were inoculated into fresh pine wood shavings (PWS) microcosms. The strains were isolated from feces (SH-AAFC), carcass (SH-ARS) and thigh (SH-FSIS) of broiler chicken. SH-AAFC harbored an antimicrobial resistant gene (ARG) blaCMY-2 on an IncI1 plasmid while SH-FSIS harbored multiple ARGs (floR, cmlA1, tet(A), blaTEM-1B, ant(2'')-Ia, aph(6)-Id, aph(3'')-Ib and sul2) on an IncC plasmid. SH-ARS was pan-susceptible. The die-off of Salmonella was determined at days 0, 1, 7, 14 and 21. Antibiotic susceptibility tests and whole genome sequencing were performed on 77 isolates. At 21 days post-inoculation, Salmonella abundance decreased by 4.4 Log10 CFU/g with the water activity of PWS being correlated with Salmonella survival. SH-AAFC clonal populations survived longer in PWS than SH-FSIS and SH-ARS populations. SH-AAFC clones persisting in litter carried higher copy number of Col plasmids than their ancestors, while some SH-ARS clones acquired a lysogenic bacteriophage from SH-FSIS populations. These results suggests that mobile genetic determinants such as plasmids (which could carry ARGs) and bacteriophage plays roles in the persistence of S. Heidelberg in the PWS used as broiler litter.
- Published
- 2024
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