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Phylogenetic Groups and Antimicrobial Resistance Genes in Escherichia coli from Different Meat Species.

Angelika Sacher-PirklbauerDaniela Klein-JöbstlDmitrij SofkaAnne-Béatrice Blanc-PotardFriederike Hilbert
Published in: Antibiotics (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
Escherichia coli isolated from meat of different animal species may harbour antimicrobial resistance genes and may thus be a threat to human health. The objectives of this study were to define antimicrobial resistance genes in E. coli isolates from pork, beef, chicken- and turkey meat and analyse whether their resistance genotypes associated with phylogenetic groups or meat species. A total number of 313 E. coli samples were isolated using standard cultural techniques. In 98% of resistant isolates, a dedicated resistance gene could be identified by PCR. Resistance genes detected were tet (A) and tet (B) for tetracycline resistance, strA and aadA 1 for streptomycin resistance, sul I and sul II for resistance against sulphonamides, dfr and aphA for kanamycin resistance and bla TEM for ampicillin resistance. One stx1 harbouring E. coli isolated from pork harboured the tet (A) gene and belonged to phylogenetic group B2, whilst another stx1 positive isolate from beef was multi-resistant and tested positive for bla TEM, aphA , strA-B , sul II, and tet (A) and belonged to phylogenetic group A. In conclusion, the distribution of resistance elements was almost identical and statistically indifferent in isolates of different meat species. Phylogenetic groups did not associate with the distribution of resistance genes and a rather low number of diverse resistance genes were detected. Most E. coli populations with different resistance genes against one drug often revealed statistically significant different MIC values.
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