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In Vivo Effect of a Nisin-Biogel on the Antimicrobial and Virulence Signatures of Canine Oral Enterococci .

Eva CunhaAna Filipa FerreiraSara ValenteAlice MatosLuís Miguel CarreiraMarta VideiraLélia ChambelLuís TavaresManuela Oliveira
Published in: Antibiotics (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Periodontal disease is a relevant oral disease in dogs and nisin-biogel has been previously proposed to be used in its control. Enterococci , as inhabitants of the oral cavity with a high genetic versatility, are a reliable bacterial model for antimicrobial studies. Our goal was to evaluate the in vivo influence of the long-term dental application of the nisin-biogel on the virulence and antimicrobial signatures of canine oral enterococci . Twenty dogs were randomly allocated to one of two groups (treatment group-TG with nisin-biogel dental application, or control group-CG without treatment) and submitted to dental plaque sampling at day 0 and after 90 days (T90). Samples were processed for Enterococcus spp. isolation, quantification, identification, molecular typing and antimicrobial and virulence characterization. From a total of 140 enterococci , molecular typing allowed us to obtain 70 representative isolates, mostly identified as E. faecalis and E. faecium . No significant differences ( p > 0.05) were observed in the virulence index of the isolates obtained from samples collected from the TG and CG at T90. At T90, a statistically significant difference ( p = 0.0008) was observed in the antimicrobial resistance index between the isolates from the TC and CG. Oral enterococci were revealed to be reservoirs of high resistant and virulent phenotypes.
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