Evidence of cross-contamination of waste workers and transmission of antimicrobial resistance genes by coagulase-negative Staphylococcus isolated from dental solid waste: an intriguing study.
Débora Guimarães CalefiJoão Paulo Amaral HaddadSilvia Helena Souza Pietra PedrosoPaula Prazeres MagalhãesLuiz Macêdo FariasCristina Dutra VieiraSimone Gonçalves Dos SantosPublished in: International journal of environmental health research (2021)
The aim of this study was to phenotypically and genotypically identify coagulase-negative Staphylococcus (CoNS) recovered from the nostrils of waste workers and from dental waste; 135 strains were recovered and S. epidermidis was the prevailing species. Genetic similarity (100%) was observed between the two S. epidermidis isolated from different employees on the same shift and 85% similarity between the S. epidermidis recovered from an employee's nostril and from waste. The mecA gene was found in 20 CoNS, and 20% were also found to possess the vanA gene. The blaZ gene was detected in 46.7%, and the icaA (34.8%), B and C genes (11.8% each). Our findings emphasized the biological risk to which waste workers are exposed and unprecedently confirms that it was possible to recover genetically identical bacterial species from waste and from workers' nostrils. It is important to highlight that this risk is raised by the detection of relevant antimicrobial resistance genes. The results also suggest that effective measures to correctly manage waste and promote the rational use of antimicrobials should be adopted.
Keyphrases
- antimicrobial resistance
- heavy metals
- genome wide
- sewage sludge
- municipal solid waste
- genome wide identification
- biofilm formation
- life cycle
- copy number
- risk assessment
- staphylococcus aureus
- dna methylation
- transcription factor
- bioinformatics analysis
- genome wide analysis
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- drinking water
- climate change
- candida albicans