Login / Signup

Selection of Multidrug-Resistant Enterobacteria in Weaned Pigs and Its Association With In-feed Subtherapeutic Combination of Colistin and Tylosin.

Marlon do Valle BarrosoMaria Catarina Megumi KasuyaSofia Magalhães MoreiraYasmin Neves Vieira SabinoGabriel Cipriano RochaMaria Aparecida Scatamburlo MoreiraDenise Mara Soares BazzolliHilário Cuquetto Mantovanie
Published in: Current microbiology (2022)
In-feed antibiotics are administered to piglets to improve performance and production efficiency. However, the use of growth promoters in the swine industry can select for multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria. Here, we evaluate the resistance profile of enterobacteria isolated from fecal samples of weaned pigs (21-35 days) fed or not with antibiotics (colistin and tylosin) and investigated the piglets gut microbiota in both groups. Six hundred and eighteen bacterial cultures were isolated from the control group (CON; n = 384) and antibiotic-fed pigs (ATB; n = 234). All isolates were tested for resistance to 12 antibiotics belonging to six distinct antibiotic classes. Isolates were highly resistant to ampicillin (90%; n = 553), amoxicillin (85%; n = 525), and tetracycline (81%; n = 498). A significant increase (P < 0.05) in resistance to cephalexin, kanamycin, doxycycline, and colistin was observed for bacteria from the ATB group. Piglets allocated in the ATB and CON groups shared similar intestinal microbiota, as revealed by alpha- and beta-diversity analyses. Our findings demonstrate that colistin and tylosin contribute to select MDR enterobacteria in weaned piglets. The high frequency of antibiotic resistance among isolates from the CON group suggests that environmental sources (e.g., fecal contents, aerosols, soil, water, food) also represent a potential reservoir of multidrug-resistant enterobacteria in pig production systems.
Keyphrases